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1 . It's often said that you can judge a person by looking at what's on their bookshelves. Well, when I asked myself this question a few years ago, I made a(n) _______ discovery. Pretty much all the _______ on my bookshelves were written by British authors, and there was almost nothing in translation from other _______. What a shame! So, I decided to begin my _____________ reading project.

But how could I find books from much of the rest of the world? I had to ask for _______. So in October 2011, I started my blog, and I _______ a short appeal (呼吁) online. Within hours, people began to _______. At first, it was friends and colleagues. Then it was friends of friends. And soon, it was _______.

Four days later, I got a(n) _______ from a woman called Rafidah in Kuala Lumpur. She said she loved my project, ________ if she could go to her local English-language bookshop and choose my Malaysian book and post it to me. I ________ accepted, and a few weeks later, a package ________ containing nothing but two books — Rafidah's choice from Malaysia, and a book from Singapore that she had also ________ for me. At the time, I was ________ that a stranger more than 6,000 miles away would go to such lengths to help someone she would probably never ________.

But Rafidah's kindness ________ to be the pattern for that year. Time and again, people went out of their ________ to help me. And books often came from ________ sources. A writer even emailed me an unpublished translation of his novel to me, allowing me to become one of the ________ people ever to read that book in English.

That year, thanks to kind strangers from the four ________ of the world. I read books from over 100 countries.

1.
A.pleasingB.shockingC.excitingD.touching
2.
A.booksB.dictionariesC.photosD.discs
3.
A.accentsB.culturesC.backgroundsD.languages
4.
A.nationalB.globalC.officialD.beneficial
5.
A.moneyB.directionC.helpD.permission
6.
A.postedB.returnedC.receivedD.searched
7.
A.come into viewB.get in touchC.take no noticeD.come to life
8.
A.starsB.writersC.strangersD.adults
9.
A.parcelB.giftC.envelopeD.message
10.
A.wonderingB.doubtingC.worryingD.realizing
11.
A.awkwardlyB.unwillinglyC.happilyD.confidently
12.
A.roseB.arrivedC.droppedD.fell
13.
A.picked outB.come acrossC.given awayD.dealt with
14.
A.confusedB.curiousC.frightenedD.amazed
15.
A.meetB.attractC.hurtD.ignore
16.
A.appearedB.happenedC.provedD.recognized
17.
A.homeB.companyC.businessD.way
18.
A.usefulB.surprisingC.familiarD.common
19.
A.bestB.lastC.firstD.latest
20.
A.cornersB.squaresC.oceansD.sides

2 . Children born in the past four decades had the luxury of being the center of their parents’ attention. The entire family’s resources were poured into their education and well-being.

However,when the same resources are split between two children,the amount distributed to each one is going to shrink.

According to the Hangzhou Daily,when there are two children in the family,parents tend to choose public schools instead of private schools,which are usually more expensive. Each child is enrolled in fewer after-school training classes.

But having a second child may cure some deep-rooted problems in China’s traditional family education.

Having two children in the family can help to prevent one child being spoiled by too much attention,according to People’s Daily. It also spares the only child from the pressure of shouldering parental expectations all alone. Taking care of a sibling also enables children to gain a sense of responsibility,cooperation,obedience and caring.

China’s public education system is also expected to shift. Currently,there are not enough vacancies in kindergarten and schools to accommodate the potential increase in children.

“It’s not only the enrollment capacity of educational institutions that will feel the pressure. People are also placing more emphasis on the quality of education,”Peng Xizhe, director of the Population and Development Research Policy Center at Fudan University,told China Education Daily.

He predicts the government may have to invest more to support the educational system as a result of the new family planning measure.

1. What can children benefit from a two-child family?
A.They can have less pressure.
B.They can study in private schools.
C.They can get much more attention.
D.They can take more after-school training classes.
2. Which of the following words can replace the underlined word “accommodate”?
A.holdB.adaptC.solveD.consider
3. What can we infer from Peng Xizhi’s words?
A.People are placing more emphasis on the quality of education.
B.The government may have to invest more to support the educational system.
C.The new family planning measure will challenge the current educational system.
D.The educational institutions will feel the pressure that their capacity is not enough.
4. What is the purpose of this text?
A.To show benefits of owning two children.
B.To persuade people to bear more children.
C.To encourage people to have only one child.
D.To introduce the impact of two-child policy.
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3 . A glimpse at Spring Festival Chinese film releases

The clock is ticking down to 2021! We’ve handpicked some films to help you get in the spirit of the season.

Hi, Mom

The film is widely regarded as the top dark horse thanks to its tear-jerking narration of mother-daughter affection, which is directed by Jia Ling.

Time: Feb. 12—14 9:30 a. m.〜11 :30 a.m.

Place: Room 1

Treats: Popcorn, Ice cream

Price: ¥80

Detective Chinatown 3

Directed by Chen Sicheng, this movie topped the list of the most-anticipated holiday films sent by movie ticketing platform Maoyan.

Time: Feb. 14-16 1:00p. m.〜3:00P.m.

Place : Room 2

Treats: Popcorn, Ice cream (for free)

Price: ¥75

A Writer\ Odyssey

Director Lu Yang showed a boldly imaginative visualization of a horrible fantasy world, taking the third seat with 410 million yuan.

Time: Feb. 13—17 9 :30 a. m. 11 :30 a. m.

Place: Room 3

Price: ¥65

Endgame

The film illustrates a comical up and down fate between an unsuccessful theater actor and a famous professional assassin(刺客)who loses his memory accidentally.

Time: Feb. 15 — 18 3:30 p. m.〜5:30 p. m.

Place: Room 4

Price: ¥60

Welcome to book through the WeChat account!

1. Which room will show a film about family love?
A.Room 1.B.Room 2.C.Room 3.D.Room 4.
2. What time can you get free treats?
A.Feb. 16 3:00 a. m.B.Feb. 15 2:00 p. m.
C.Feb. 18 2:00 p. m.D.Feb. 14 11 :00 a. m.
3. Where is the text probably from?
A.A report.B.A poster.C.A journal.D.A guidebook.

4 . China's pandemic(流行病) — hit tourism sector breathed a sigh of relief as people got back to travelling during the eight-day holiday on account of the country's National Day and Mid- Autumn Festival.

A total of 637 million trips were made across China during the eight-day holiday, 79 percent of last year's number, according to data released by the Ministry of Culture and Tourism on Thursday.

Revenue from tourism hit 466.56 billion yuan (around $68.71 billion), 69.9 percent of the same period last year.

The country's transportation hubs witnessed a surge (激增) in return trips on Thursday as the eight-day holiday drew to a close. 1,234 additional trains were put into operation to handle the peak in trips involving tourism and family visits, according to the China State Railway Group Co., Ltd.

The daily train trips had exceeded 10 million for eight consecutive days by Wednesday, the railway operator said.

In a bid to cope with the surging passenger flow, airliners used wide-body aircraft for r 30 popular routes connecting Xi'an, Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Shenzhen and Hangzhou.

The country's transport sector maintained stable and orderly operation during the extended holiday, said the Ministry of Transport.

China celebrates its National Day on October 1, and the week-long holiday this year has been extended to October 8 as it overlapped with the Mid-Autumn Festival, a traditional festival symbolizing family reunion that falls on the 15th day of the eighth month on the lunar calendar.

1. What is the text mainly about?
A.Two overlapped holidays in China this year.
B.China's tourism sector got quick development.
C.China's transport sector faced a huge challenge.
D.The number of Chinese travelers increased rapidly.
2. What can we know about China's tourism sector?
A.It was hit by the pandemic this year.
B.It felt relieved because people got back to work.
C.It came to a standstill (停滞) because of the eight-day holiday.
D.It relies on the Mid-Autumn Festival.
3. What can we infer about last year's National Day holiday?
A.There were 637 million trips in total.
B.79 percent of travelers went out during the holiday.
C.Tourism incomes were higher than this year.
D.Over a thousand additional trains were put into operation.
4. Why are there eight days during this year's National Day holiday?
A.Because 2020 is a tough year.
B.Because China's tourism needs an extra break.
C.Because the Mid-Autumn festival and the National Day are on the same day.
D.Because there is too much pressure on China's transportation during this holiday.
2021-03-15更新 | 79次组卷 | 2卷引用:新疆维吾尔自治区乌鲁木齐市第三中学2020-2021学年下学期高一英语期末试题

5 . We’ve all heard exercise helps you live longer. But a new study goes one step further, finding that a sedentary(久坐不动的) lifestyle is worse for your health than smoking and heart disease.

Dr. Wael Jaber, a doctor at the Cleveland Clinic and senior author of the study, called the results "extremely surprising."

"Being unfit in an exercise stress test has a worse prognosis(预后), as far as death, than being a smoker," Jaber told CNN. "We've never seen something as noticeable as this and as objective as this. "

"It should be treated almost as a disease that has a prescription, which is called exercise," he said.

Researchers studied 122,007 patients who took exercise stress tests at Cleveland Clinic between January 1, 1991 and December 31, 2020 to measure death rate relating to the benefits of exercise and fitness. Comparing those with a sedentary lifestyle to the top exercise performers, he said, the risk associated with death is "500% higher. "

What made the study so unique, beyond the number of people studied, he said was that researchers weren't relying on patients self-reporting their exercise. "This is not the patients telling us what they do," Jaber said. "This is our testing them and figuring out objectively the real measure of what they do. "

Researchers have always been concerned that "ultra(高强度的)" exercisers might be at a higher risk of death, but the study found that not to be the case.

The benefits of exercise were seen across all ages and in both men and women, "probably a little more noticeable in females," Jaber said. "Whether you’re in your 40s or your 80s, you will benefit in the same way. "

1. Which statement is true according to the study?
A.High levels of exercise can cause higher death rate.
B.The death rate of those with lowest exercise is 12%.
C.Being unfit has higher risks of death than smoking.
D.Sedentary lifestyle is the major cause of heart disease.
2. The word “prescription” in paragraph 4 probably refers to________.
A.a habit hard to removeB.a method to solve a problem
C.a treatment given by a doctorD.a plan to take exercise regularly
3. What is special about the study?
A.The long period of the tests.B.The number of the researchers.
C.The objective tests and calculations.D.The self-reporting of the participants.
4. What do the findings of the study suggest?
A.Ultra exercise does no good to our health.B.Women should take more exercise than men
C.Exercise is the best way to treat heart disease.D.Patients should be encouraged to exercise daily.
2021-03-11更新 | 121次组卷 | 7卷引用:新疆沙湾第一中学2020-2021学年高一下学期期中考试英语试题
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6 . While cities are known for being centers of culture and entertainment, small towns often have just as much to offer. The following are among the best small towns in the US.

ALASKA: Sitka

Population: 8, 493

Sitka is located   on Baranof Island ,making it only accessible by plane or boat. Lying between mountains and the Pacific ocean, it gives residents splendid views and even incredible wildlife.

From whale watching to incredible hikes, Sitka has everything an adventure traveler needs within a small town setting.

COLORADO: Crested Butte

Population: 1,681

Crested Butte, situated in the Rocky Mountains, is known for its flowers. In fact, the town is called the “Wildflower Capital of Colorado," One of the town's most beautiful seasons is July, when it hosts the Wildflower Festival. The warmer months also offer 750 miles of biking trails and camping in the forest. In the winter, Crested Butte becomes a popular skiing destination.

LOUISIANA: St. Francisville

Population: 1,616

St. Francisville, Louisiana, is so peaceful and beautiful that it even made it to the big screen, becoming the set for movies like Tom Cruise's "Oblivion" and "The Maze Runner." You can also explore historic plantations alongside some of the most beautiful scenes. The Bluffs is another attraction in town for those who love golf

WISCONSIN: Stockholm

Population: 66

Lying along the Mississippi River, Stockholm, Wisconsin, has remained relatively untouched over the years. With just over 60 residents, Stockholm has no chain stores or restaurants in town. Its local businesses still attract travelers, though, especially its famous pie shop, Stockholm Pie and General Store. Owing to its location, the town was able to preserve its Swedish heritage.

1. Which is a perfect destination for adventurers?
A.ALASKA: Sitka.B.COLORADO: Crested Butte.
C.LOUISIANA: St. Francisville.D.WISCONSIN: Stockholm.
2. What do Crested Butte and St. Francisville have in common?
A.A long history.B.Demanding biking trails.
C.Beautiful scenes.D.Incredible wildlife.
3. What enables Stockholm to keep its original features?
A.Its small population.B.Its delicious pies.
C.Its responsible travelers.D.Its unique location.
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7 . Some termite (白蚁) species have figured out how to enjoy the shelter of the huge complex nests that the insects build without contributing to their construction. They avoid the full anger of their builder hosts by being extremely easy-going.

Animals that live in the nests of another species without affecting them are known as inquilines. Inquiline termites are unique among termites in being unable to make their own nests. Instead, they live in the hallways built by another termite, Constrictotermes cyphergaster. Until now, it has been unclear how the two parties kept peaceful in such tight quarters because termites are typically very aggressive towards outsiders.

Helder Hugo at the University of Konstanz in Germany and his colleagues collected Constrictotermes cyphergaster’s nests in the Brazilian Cerrado and brought them into the laboratory. They then placed host and tenant (房客) termites in either open or narrow areas and used video to track and record the ways in which the two species reacted to each other.

Right from the start, the inquiline’ termites moved around less than their hosts and interacted little with them, even in the much narrower area. “Many times,” says Hugo, “when two unrelated groups are put together in a limited space—such as an experimental area—the outcome is conflict with losses from both sides.” But that didn’t happen here. Despite attacks from host termites, the tenant termites were obedient. Hosts would bite or attack the inquilines with strong chemicals, but their targets never responded in the same way, choosing to flee. Some ignored the hosts completely.

“We did not expect that they would never fight back,” says Hugo, noting that the inquilines are capable of protecting their own place with mouths. “By preventing conflict going worse, inquiline termites may considerably improve their chances of living together with their host termites peacefully.”

“Passiveness does not necessarily lead to defeat, but can be a very useful strategy, saving energy and resources,” she adds. “Nature may not always be red in tooth and claw, and aggression is not any more successful a strategy than ‘cowardice’ (儒弱).”

1. What is the feature of the inquiline termites?
A.They live in another termite species’ nests.
B.They are aggressive towards outsiders.
C.They like to build their own nests.
D.They are communicative tenants.
2. What do you learn about the experiment in paragraph 3?
A.The differences between the two species.
B.The findings of the observation.
C.The living habits of termites.
D.The process of the research.
3. What does Hugo think of the inquiline termites’ living strategy?
A.Aggressive.B.Unacceptable.C.Effective.D.Dangerous.
4. What’s the best title for the text?
A.The Characteristics of Termites
B.Passiveness Doesn’t Necessarily Lead to Defeat
C.The Relationship Between Host and Tenant Termites
D.Termites Use Cowardice to Avoid Their Hosts’ Anger
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8 . A recent study showed that the experiences children have in their first few years are important. These experiences affect the development of the brain. When children receive more attention, they often have higher IQs. Babies receive information when they see, hear and feel things, which makes connections between different parts of the brain. There are a hundred trillion connections in the brain o£ a three-year-old child.

Researcher Judit Gervain tested how good newborns are at telling different sound patterns. The researchers produced images o£ the brains of babies as they heard different sound patterns. For example5one order was mu—ba—ba. This is the pattern "A -B— B”. Another order was mu—ba—ge. This is the pattern "A-B—C”. The images showed that the part of the brain responsible for speech was more active during the "A—B-B” pattern. This shows that babies can tell the difference between different patterns. They also were sensitive(敏感)to where it occurred in the order.

Gervain is excited by these findings because the order of sounds is the base of words and grammar, "Position is key to language," she says. "If something is at the beginning or at the end, it makes a big difference: 'John caught the bear' is very different from 'The bear caught John.

Researchers led by scientist Patricia Kuhl have found that language delivered by televisions, audio books, the Internet, or smartphones——no matter how educational—— doesn't appear to be enough for children's brain development. They carried out a study of nine-month-old American babies. They expected the first group who'd watched videos in Chinese to show the same kind of learning as the second group who were brought face-to- face with the same sounds. Instead they found a huge difference. The babies in the second group were able to distinguish (辨别)between similar Chinese sounds as well as native listeners. But the other babies-regardless of whether they had watched the video or listened to the audio-learned nothing.

1. Why are early experiences so important to children according to the study?
A.They can show connections in their brains.
B.They can increase new information of IQs.
C.They can offer children more attention,
D.They can help to develop their brains.
2. How was the research carried out?
A.By recognizing babies5 different appearances.
B.By producing images of new words for babies,
C.By testing how babies' brains learn to speak language.
D.By checking babies' brains to identify different sound patterns.
3. Why is Gervain excited about the findings?
A.Grammar is important in learning languages,
B.Different orders of sounds have different meanings.
C.The order of words comes from its grammar meaning.
D.Different languages have different grammar rules.
4. What is Patricia Kuhl most likely to agree?
A.Learning Chinese is of great benefit to babies' brains.
B.Babies are better than adults in learning a foreign language.
C.Face-to-face communication can improve babies' brains.
D.Babies learn a lot from television, audio books or the Internet.
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9 . It was late, about 10:15 p. m. Esposito got off the train at Bellport, New York, went to her car and started driving home. She was so familiar with the route that she almost drove automatically: turned left to the Station Road, then another left onto Montauk Highway, and then-bam! When Esposito's car had just crossed the railroad tracks, it hit another vehicle and was plashed back onto the tracks. Injured but mostly shocked by the crash and by the airbags that popped up, she was stuck in the vehicle.

As it happened, Pete DiPinto was just about to go to sleep when he heard a sharp noise and saw the accident not far outside his bedroom window. As a volunteer firefighter and retired teacher, DiPinto, who was 65, fetched a flash light and rushed out without hesitation. "Any firefighter would have done what I did," he said, "We're always on duty. "

At first, he spotted the other car in the accident. After making sure that the driver was all right. DiPinto looked around and discovered Esposito's car straddling(横跨)the railway tracks. And then he heard the bell ring, which signaled a train's arrival.

DiPinto rushed to Esposito's car and broke the window on the driver's side. Esposito looked up at him, with her eyes glazing over. "I don't know where I am,” she said.

"You're on the railroad tracks," DiPinto yelled. "I have to get you off right now!" The train was running toward them at a speed of some 105 kilometers per hour. The driver's door cannot be opened due to the collision, so DiPinto quickly ran to the other side and managed to open the door. He put the airbags aside, seized her arms, pulled her toward him across the passenger seat until finally got her out and walked her to safety as swiftly as possible. Several seconds later, the train crashed into the vehicle. "It was like a Hollywood movie, " DiPinto told reporters the next day.

"Last night," said Gregory, Chief of the Department in South Country Ambulance, "the hero arrived in pajamas (睡衣),not in a fire truck."

1. What was the reason for the accident?
A.Esposito didn't know the route well.
B.Esposito's car hit another vehicle.
C.Esposito drove out of the highway.
D.A running train crashed into Esposito's car.
2. How was Esposito in the accident?
A.She got stuck and couldn't move out.
B.She lost awareness completely.
C.She was lucky to escape from the train.
D.She helped rescue the driver in another car.
3. How was Esposito rescued from her car?
A.Through the roof of the car.
B.Through the passenger's door in the back.
C.Through the window on the driver's side.
D.Through the door on the passenger's side.
4. What did Gregory mean by "the hero arrived in pajamas, not in a fire truck"?
A.DiPinto was not a professional firefighter.
B.DiPinto rushed to save life without thinking about himself.
C.DiPinto was a special firefighter who liked wearing pajamas.
D.DiPinto was unable to find a fire truck in his house.

10 . Imagine that the genome (基因组) is a book. The book consists of 23 chapters, with thousands of stories made up of paragraphs, words and letters on different levels. There are one billion words in the book, which makes it longer than 500 dictionaries. If I read the genome out to you at the rate of one word per second for eight hours a day, it would take me a century. If I wrote out the human genome, one letter per millimeter, my text would be as long as the River Danube. This enormous document, however, all fits inside the extremely small nucleus (核) of a tiny cell that fits easily upon the head of a pin (针尖).

The idea of the genome as a book is not, strictly speaking, even a metaphor (比喻). It is true to a great extent. A book is a piece of digital information, written in one-directional form and controlled by a system that translates a small alphabet (字母表) of letters into a large dictionary of meanings through the order of their groupings. So is a genome. The only difference is that all English books read from left to right, while some parts of the genome read from left to right, and some from right to left, though never both at the same time.

While English books are written in words of different lengths using twenty-six letters, genomes are written entirely in three-letter words, using only four letters. And instead of being written on flat pages, they are written on long chains of DNA molecules (分子). The genome is a very clever book, because in the right conditions it can both photocopy itself and read itself.

1. What facts do you know about the genome?
A.It has 23 chapters.B.It is extremely long.
C.It is in the cell nucleus.D.It is on the pin head.
2. In what sense is the genome like a book?
A.Both have digital images.B.Both are read from left to right.
C.Both are grouped by subject.D.Both have a translation system.
3. What can we know about genomes from paragraph 3?
A.They are nearly of the same length.B.They are made up of DNA.
C.They can reproduce each other.D.They are written on flat pages.
4. Why did the writer make a comparison of the genome to a book?
A.To focus on the differences.B.To emphasize the similarities.
C.To simplify the concept.D.To give different description.
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