组卷网 > 知识点选题 > 人与自然
更多: | 只看新题 精选材料新、考法新、题型新的试题
解析
| 共计 26 道试题
22-23高二上·天津·期中
阅读理解-阅读单选(约370词) | 较难(0.4) |
名校
文章大意:这是一篇说明文。旨在介绍一种新型二氧化碳捕捉设备。

1 . A major new facility to pull CO2 out of the atmosphere has started operating in Iceland, which is a boost to an emerging technology that experts say could eventually play an important role in reducing greenhouse gases.

The plant in southwest Iceland is the biggest of its kind, its builder says. It is able to capture 900 tons of CO2 every year but it needs heat and electricity to work. It is using energy produced from waste and is built on the roof of a waste incineration plant, and through the burning of rubbish, energy is generated.

Human-sized fans are built into a series of boxes. They take CO2 out of the air, catching it in spongelike filters (过滤器). The filters are blasted with heat, freeing the gas, which is then mixed with water and pumped deep into deep underground basalt caves, where over time it turns into dark-gray stone. Pumping CO2 into the ground is just one way to deal with it. The makers are also selling the gas to be used again. The CO2 can be captured just a few 100 miles away. It is pumped through an underground pipeline directly into a greenhouse. Vegetables and plants love CO2 and higher concentrations of the gas within the greenhouse improve the growth of plants.

By 2050, humanity will need to pull nearly a billion metric tons of CO2 from the atmosphere every year through direct air capture technology to achieve carbon neutral goals, according to International Energy Agency recommendations. The plant in Iceland will be able to capture 4000 metric tons annually — just a small amount of what will be necessary, but an engineer in Climeworks, the company that built it, says it can grow rapidly as efficiency improves and costs decrease.

“This is a market that does not yet exist, but a market that urgently needs to be built,” said Christoph Gebald who co-founded Climeworks. “This plant that we have here is really the blueprint to further increase the size and really industrialize.”

1. What do we know about the carbon capture facility from paragraph 2?
A.It is built at high altitudes.B.It uses waste to produce power.
C.It makes Iceland free of air pollution.D.lt produces lots of heat during operation.
2. What is the third paragraph mainly about?
A.The methods of breaking down CO2.
B.The approaches to reusing waste gas.
C.The necessity of building greenhouses.
D.The workings of the carbon-catching plant.
3. What can we expect from the future carbon capture technology?
A.It will decrease the cost of energy production.
B.It can help reach the carbon neutral goals in advance.
C.It will speed up the reduction of CO2 levels in the air.
D.It may replace the traditional carbon storage system.
4. What can be inferred from the passage?
A.The capture of CO2 in the atmosphere is able to kill many birds with one stone.
B.CO2 will be delivered to greenhouses after being turned into dark-gray stones.
C.A major new market to pull CO2 out of the atmosphere has started operating.
D.The plants in Iceland greenhouses can capture a small amount of CO2.
5. What is Christoph Gebald’s attitude towards building the plants?
A.Ambiguous.B.Neutral.
C.Disapproving.D.Supportive.
2022-11-04更新 | 195次组卷 | 2卷引用:2019年天津卷高考真题变式题(阅读理解C)
阅读理解-阅读单选(约380词) | 较难(0.4) |
文章大意:这是一篇议论文。作者就垃圾的回收利用提出了自己的观点:听起来很美,但由于回收费用高昂,所以不值得。

2 . If you’re worried about the planet, please make sure your rubbish is buried under the ground.

People talk about “reduce, reuse, recycle.” It sounds like a good idea. There is a problem, though. Recycling costs too much money.

Even the U. S. Environmental Protection Agency(EPA) says it only makes sense economically and environmentally to recycle about 35 percent of thrown materials, Among those materials are paper and aluminum cans (铝罐), Recycling 1 ton of paper or aluminum cans, the agency says, can save about 3 tons of CO2 emissions (排放) overproducing those materials again. Paper producers pay for the trees they process If it was cost-effective to recycle paper. producers would be beating down your door to bay it. But they aren’t. That means it’s more expensive to recycle old paper than to cut trees and then replant trees for processing.

Plastic can be recycled too. Because of the recent drop in crude oil (原油) prices. it is now cheaper to make a new plastic container (塑料容器) than to recycle an old one. Even if that were not true, the EPA says that recycling a ton of plastic saves only about a ton of CO2. However, it doesn’t take into consideration the water most people use to wash their plastic containers before having them recycled. The New York Times Journalist John

Tierney recently wrote. “If you wash plastic in water that was heated by electricity, them the effect of your recycling could be mere carbon in the air.

Glass is another recyclable material. To reduce greenhouse gas emissions by I ton, you have to recycle 3 tons of glass. If one includes the cost of collecting glass waste from neighborhoods, and the pollution produced by the collection trucks and the recycling process itself, glass recycling creates more greenhouse gas emissions and is more expensive than making new glass, which comes primarily from sand that exists everywhere.

If recycling were truly cost-effective, private companies would be lining up at your doorstep to buy your rubbish. Don’t look now because they’re not there.

1. What’s the EPA’S attitude to recycling aluminum cans?
A.It is helpful to the environment.B.It is actually a waste of money.
C.It costs less than recycling paper.D.It costs the same as producing new cans.
2. What increases the cost of recycling plastic?
A.The crude oil.B.The water pollution.
C.The process to clean it.D.The electricity for lights.
3. What can be learned about making new glass?
A.It results in lots of waste in neighborhoods.
B.The material for new glass can be easily got.
C.It is slightly more expensive than recycling glass.
D.Making 3 tons of new glass produces I ton of carbon emissions.
4. What does the author mean by saying the underlined sentence?
A.Recycling will disappear soon.
B.Companies will line up at your doorstep.
C.Recycling is a way to deal with your rubbish.
D.Companies won’t bother to collect thrown materials.
5. What’s the best title for the text?
A.Whose fault is it?B.Where does waste go?
C.Is everything recyclable?D.Is it really worth the effort?
2022-07-22更新 | 254次组卷 | 1卷引用:天津部分区2019-2020学年高一上学期期末考试英语试卷
文章大意:这是一篇记叙文。文章讲述了来自底特律的26岁学生兼环保主义者奥利塔通过回收空薯片袋,为无家可归的人制作睡袋,既帮助了贫困人群,又保护了环境。

3 . Eradajere Oleita thinks she may have a partial solution for two of her country’s persistent (持续的) problems: garbage and poverty (贫困). It’s called the Chip Bag Project. The 26-year-old student and environmentalist from Detroit is asking a (n) _________ of local snack lovers: Rather than _________ your empty chip bags into the trash (垃圾桶), _________ them so she can turn them into sleeping bags for the _________.

Chip eaters drop off their _________ bags from Doritos (多力多滋薯片), Lay’s (乐事薯片), and other favorites at two _________ in Detroit: a print shop and a clothing store, where Oleita and her volunteer helpers collect them. After they _________ the chip bags in soapy hot water, they _________ them open, lay them flat, and iron them together. They use soft materials from old coats to line the insides.

It _________ about four hours to sew a sleeping bag, and each takes around 150 to 300 chip bags, __________ whether they’re single-serve or family size. The result is a sleeping bag that is “waterproof, lightweight, and easy to carry __________,” Oleita told the Detroit News.

Since its start in 2020, the Chip Bag Project has __________ more than 800,000 chip bags and, as of last December, __________ 110 sleeping bags.

Sure, it would be simpler to __________ the money to buy new sleeping bags. But that’s only half the __________ for Oleita—whose family moved to the United States from Nigeria a decade ago with the hope of __________ a better life—and her fellow volunteers. “We are__________ ourselves to making an impact not only socially, but environmentally,” she says.

And, of course, there’s the symbolism of recycling bags that would otherwise land in the __________ and using them to help the homeless. It’s a powerful reminder that environmental problems and poverty often go __________. As Oleita told hourdetroit.com: “I think it’s time to show __________ between all of these issues.”

1.
A.adviceB.questionC.favorD.permission
2.
A.throwB.trackC.leakD.lock
3.
A.designB.detectC.digestD.donate
4.
A.homelessB.disabledC.oldD.sick
5.
A.heavyB.emptyC.luxuryD.full
6.
A.momentsB.decisionsC.locationsD.conclusions
7.
A.cleanB.loadC.softenD.resolve
8.
A.digB.sliceC.liftD.knock
9.
A.paysB.takesC.delaysD.wastes
10.
A.resulting inB.figuring outC.contributing toD.depending on
11.
A.outB.aroundC.overD.on
12.
A.reachedB.relatedC.foundD.collected
13.
A.destroyedB.repairedC.comparedD.created
14.
A.loseB.lendC.raiseD.drop
15.
A.goalB.incomeC.profitD.way
16.
A.riskingB.recommendingC.attainingD.realizing
17.
A.drivingB.devotingC.enjoyingD.encouraging
18.
A.storeB.trashC.solutionD.family
19.
A.day after dayB.step by stepC.face to faceD.hand in hand
20.
A.generationsB.inspirationsC.connectionsD.expectations
2022-05-27更新 | 466次组卷 | 5卷引用:2022届天津市南开区高三二模英语试题

4 . Great Barrier Reef Choking on Pollutants

Attempts to protect the Great Barrier Reef are failing. A report released Monday by the government in Australia says water quality in the Great Barrier Reef is far below what it should be. It showed that pollution have decreased, but not enough to reach environmental targets.

Sediment (沉淀物) and chemicals can weaken coral, hurting its ability to feed and grow. Coral are live animals that take root in the ocean floor, but they are not plants. Reefs are the hard skeletons (骨架) left at the bottom of the sea by small marine creatures called polyps (珊瑚虫). The polyps then form the larger structure of a reef. Corals also are some of the most diverse ecosystems on the entire planet. They can make a home for invertebrates, crustaceans, fish, and sea snakes.

Steve Miles is Queensland’s environment minister. He says the research shows the Reef needs more protection. “Over that five-year period, we did see some progress towards our targets. Sediment is down 12 percent and pesticides (杀虫剂) loads are down 30 percent. But what is most disturbing is that these results are far from our targets. Progress towards these targets flat-lined in the period 2013-2014. If one of my kids came home with a report card like this, I would be a bit disappointed. There is more bad news here than good news. ” said Steve Miles.

The report also found that fewer than one-third of Queensland’s sugar plantations used techniques to reduce the use of pesticides. Only 28 percent of land managers managed their land properly. They had reduced harmful water run off to protect the health of the Reef. The official target is a 90 percent reduction in pesticide use within three years.

Scientists at the University of Queensland and the Australian Institute of Marine Sciences published their findings Wednesday, July 18 in the journal Science Advances. It found between 1992 and 2010, the recovery rate dropped by an average of 84 percent. But there is hope. The study also found some corals can recover quickly if “acute and chronic stressors” are lessened.

Meanwhile, the Australian government released its updated reef protection plan Friday. It clearly states global temperatures must be stopped from rising in order to save the world’s largest living structure.

1. What does the underlined word “They” in Paragraph 2 refer to?
A.Diverse ecosystems.B.Sediment and chemicals.
C.Reefs and corals.D.Small sea creatures.
2. What can be learned from what Steve Miles said?
A.He is satisfied with the protection of the Reef.
B.He thinks that the Reef needs more protection.
C.He feels angry with what his children did.
D.He is very happy about the Reef progress protection.
3. What does the underlined word “flat-lined” mean in Paragraph 3?
A.Not increase significantly.B.Disappear.
C.Speed up.D.Miss the chance.
4. The report found the majority of land managers in Queensland   ________.
A.were tough to deal withB.failed to manage their land properly
C.reduced the amount of harmful waterD.were eager to quit pesticide soon
5. Where is the passage most likely to have been taken from?
A.A news report.B.A science fiction.
C.A book review.D.A guide book.
2021-03-25更新 | 422次组卷 | 5卷引用:江苏省苏州市吴中区苏苑高级中学高一上学期月考英语试卷
智能选题,一键自动生成优质试卷~

5 . Scientists have not found any signs of life on Mars yet,but they say a robotic vehicle called “Curiosity” is helping them learn a lot about the planet’s history and climate.

Curiosity landed on Mars in August 2012 after travelling through space for more than eight months.It was sent to Mars by scientists from NASA in the United States.

Curiosity is about the size of a car and has six wheels.It also has a robotic arm,cameras,and instruments that allow it to examine things it finds on the surface.Then it sends the information back to the earth.

Curiosity’s main task is to find out if anything could live on Mars,either now or in the past.On Nov.2,NASA scientists held a press conference (新闻发布会) to discuss what Curiosity had found in its first two months on Mars.

Curiosity has found soil that is similar to the sand formed by volcanoes (火山) on the earth.Scientists say that studying the minerals in Martian soil will help them understand what conditions were like on the planet in the past.Curiosity also found smooth stones like the ones found on river beds and seashores on the earth,where their rough edges have been worn down by water.Mars is very cold and dry now,but scientists say the smooth stones tell them that a river used to run through the place where they were found.

Curiosity has been testing the atmosphere around Mars for a type of gas called methane (甲烷),but so far it has not found any.On the earth,most methane is produced by plants or animals.Methane on Mars might indicate that some type of tiny plants or animals lived there.

Curiosity is the fourth robotic vehicle to be sent to Mars.It will continue to explore the planet for about two years.

1. Which of the following descriptions about Curiosity is TRUE?
A.It landed on Mars in January 2012.
B.It is small in size and has four arms.
C.It took over eight months to arrive in Mars.
D.It was sent to Mars by scientists from Russia.
2. According to the information sent back by Curiosity,scientists believe that    .
A.there’s no air on MarsB.Mars is warm and wet now
C.the soil on Mars is richD.there used to be water on Mars
3. The underlined word “they” in Paragraph 5 refers to “   ”.
A.smooth stonesB.rivers
C.robotic vehiclesD.volcanoes
4. We know from the sixth paragraph that    .
A.some tiny animals once lived on Mars
B.there are no plants or animals on Mars now
C.the atmosphere around Mars is full of methane
D.Curiosity is designed to test the atmosphere around the earth
5. What is the main idea of the passage?
A.Humans benefit a lot by going to Mars.
B.Scientists will stop the research on Mars soon.
C.It is possible to build an earth-like environment on Mars.
D.A robotic vehicle helps scientists get useful information from Mars.

6 . 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
书信写作-其他应用文 | 较难(0.4) |
名校
7 . 假设你是星光中学的李华,将参加主题为“Let’s Ride B.icycles”的英语演讲比赛。请撰写一份演讲稿,主要内容包括:
1.目前汽车带来的空气污染和交通堵塞等问题。
2.骑自行车的益处,如能环保有利健康等。
参考词汇:低碳生活(low-carbon life)   节能 (energy saving)
注意:1.词数:100词左右;
2.演讲稿开头和结尾已给出,不计入总词数。

Good morning, everyone!


__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

That’s all! Thank you for your listening!

8 . Average age is rising around the world——a demographic (人口统计)change that may pose a significant challenge to efforts to slow down climate change.

Hossein Estiri at Harvard University and Emilio Zagheni of the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Germany, have found that energy use increases as we get older, and not just because we tend to get wealthier. An ageing population could mean a greater proportion of society with higher energy use, their study suggests.

They combined two decades, worth of data from thousands of US households and used this to build a model to reveal how energy use varied across 17 age groups between 1987 and 2009. They found that, on average, children's energy consumption (消耗)climbs as they grow up, before dipping slightly when they leave home. Consumption then rises again when people hit their 30s, before briefly dropping after 55, and then beginning to climb again. The study involved factors such as income, local climate and the age, type and size of a person's home. The increase in energy use at various points in our lifespan (寿命)seems to be the result of life style and how our needs change as we age.

Why does demand grow so much in our 30s? “We need more of everything. More space, a bigger TV two fridges," says Estiri. The study found that, in warmer parts of the US, energy use increases in people over the age of 65—probably as a result of increased use of air conditioning, This suggests that there is a feedback effect between climate change and an ageing population that will only make matters worse.

Heat waves have become more common in the US in recent years and are expected to become more frequent due to global warming. More older people using more electrical energy to keep cool as temperatures rise could add to emissions (排放),and thus drive more warming until our energy supply becomes entirely fossil fuel-free.

“This confluence (汇集)of population, ageing and climate change on energy demand is really important to start thin king about," says Estiri. Benjamin Sovacool at the University of Sussex, UK, says the work shows the importance of demographics when it comes to cutting carbon emissions. Most modelling of climate change mitigation (减缓气候变化的模型) assumes people's energy consumption either stays the same or only changes by a small amount over time.

"This study directly challenges that entire body of research by forcing it to fight with the temporality and complexity of the consumption of energy, says Sovacool.

Catherine Mitchell at the University of Exeter, UK, says the research could have an important influence on policy makers. "What the paper says is that there is a lot of work about how buildings use energy, but probably not enough about how the people in them use energy," she says.

1. By saying “not just because we tend to get wealthier" in Paragraph 2, the writer probably means that .
A.poor people can't bring down the high demand for energy
B.a comfortable life is not the main cause of in creased energy use
C.there are some other reasons leading to the increase in energy consumption
D.people being wealthy or not has nothing to do with the rise of energy consumption
2. What does the author intend to tell us in Paragraph 3?
A.Children consumes more energy when they leave home.
B.Energy consumption drops briefly before people hit 55.
C.The researchers built a model to study the data from US households.
D.Energy consumption varies with the change of lifestyle and demand at different ages.
3. Which of the following statements is Hossein Estiri most likely to support?
A.Energy will stop increasing when people get older.
B.His research could inspire policymakers to change current polices.
C.Various factors influencing energy consumption should be considered.
D.Old people should use fossil fuel-free rather than electrical energy to keep cool.
4. What is the shortcoming of most modeling of climate change mitigation?
A.It is expensive and difficult to promote.
B.It overestimates the household energy consumption.
C.It did not take climate change adaptation into account.
D.It regards energy consumption as stable or as only slightly changing.
5. What can we learn from the last paragraph?
A.More emphasis should be put on people's energy use.
B.The government can't do much without the support of the study.
C.It is the buildings, not the people in side, that consume the majority of the energy.
D.Policymakers have been working on how to cut down people's energy use.
6. Which column may the article be taken from on the Internet?
A.Health.B.Environment.
C.Human.D.Technology.
2020-05-20更新 | 172次组卷 | 1卷引用:2020届天津市和平区高三线下第一次模拟考试英语试题

9 . Every year migratory(迁徙的) bats travel from Mexico to Bracken Cave, where they spend the summer consuming insects that would otherwise hungrily eat common food crops. But the bats have been showing up far earlier than they did two decades ago.

In a study, scientists at Rothamsted Research, used radar data from 160 U.S. weather stations to analyze activity in the Texas bat colony from 1995 through 2017. They discovered the creatures were leaving their winter quarters in Mexico earlier and reproducing sooner. They were also astonished to find increasing numbers of bats overwintering(过冬)at Bracken Cave instead of heading back to their cold weather quarters in Mexico. Overwintering is a sign that warmer temperatures change the bats' annual rhythms, Rothamsted biologist Phillip Stepanian says.

A separate study of migratory bats in Indiana, published last year, found that temperature variations affected arrival and departure times-likewise hinting at the potential influence of climate change. Joy O'Keefe, a biology professor and co-author of that study, says early arrival at their summer habitats could expose these bats to cold snaps(寒流), and they could freeze to death.

Joy O’Keefe and her colleagues also found that changing bat migration times can also clash with rainfall patterns. Many insects that bats eat breed in seasonal lakes and puddles. If the bats arrive too early to benefit from summer rainfall and the resulting abundance of insects, they may struggle to feed their pups(幼崽) or skip reproduction altogether, O’Keefe says. She fears this shift could cause Midwestern bats to decrease toward extinction, which would be bad news for humans. “Declines in bat populations could have severe effects for crop success,” she says, adding that bats also “control significant disease vectors, such as mosquitoes.”

However, scientists are not certain that climate change alone is causing the Bracken Cave bat colony to migrate earlier. They have found a direct link between seasonal temperatures and bird migration, but bats are also influenced by factors such as changes in wind speed and direction. And there are other complications. “Bats are mysterious little animals that move mostly at night and are difficult to observe and track ,”   Stepanian says. “We have this conceptual picture of what might be happening, but really tying it to the cause is the next step.”

1. What is the best title for the passage?
A.Bats’ habitantsB.Endangered bats
C.Bats’ migrationD.Bats, our good friends
2. Scientists at Rothamsted Research found that ______.
A.bats prefer heading back to MexicoB.bats delay their reproduction
C.warming affects bat migrationD.radar can be used to observe bats
3. Joy O’Keefe discovered that ______.
A.bats are used to living in rainfall seasons
B.bats’ earlier migration might harm farming
C.insects' reproduction helps to spread disease
D.insects shortage makes bats reproduce earlier
4. What does the underlined word they refer to?
A.Insects.B.migration times.
C.Bats.D.lakes and puddles.
5. What does the last paragraph want to tell us?
A.Wind speed and direction affect bats.
B.It is difficult to observe and track bats.
C.Climate change makes bats migrate earlier.
D.Further research on the cause is necessary.
2020-04-09更新 | 189次组卷 | 1卷引用:2020届天津市南开中学高三上学期第一次检测英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约370词) | 较难(0.4) |

10 . George Gershwin, born in 1898, was one of America's greatest composers. He published his first song when he was eighteen years old. During the next twenty years he wrote more than five hundred songs.

Many of Gershwin's songs were first written for musical plays performed in theatres in New York City. These plays were a popular form of entertainment in the 1920s and 1930s. Many of his songs have remained popular as ever. Over the years they have been sung and played in every possible way — from jazz to country.

In the 1920s there was a debate in the United States about jazz music. Could jazz, some people asked, be considered serious music? In 1924 jazz musician and orchestra leader Paul Whiteman decided to organize a special concert to show that jazz was serious music. Gershwin agreed to compose something for the concert before he realized he had just a few weeks to do it. And in that short time, he composed a piece for piano and orchestra which he called Rhapsody in Blue. Gershwin himself played the piano at the concert. The audience were thrilled when they heard his music. It made him world­famous and showed that jazz music could be both serious and popular.

In 1928, Gershwin went to Paris. He applied to study composition (作曲)with the well­known musician Nadia Boulanger, but she rejected him. She was afraid that classical study would ruin his jazz­influenced style. While there, Gershwin wrote An American in Paris. When it was first performed, critics (评论家)were divided over the music. Some called it happy and full of life, to others it was silly and boring. But it quickly became popular in Europe and the United States. It still remains one of his most famous works.

George Gershwin died in 1937, just days after doctors learned he had brain cancer. He was only thirty­nine years old. Newspapers all over the world reported his death on their front pages. People mourned the loss of the man and all the music he might have still written.

1. Many of Gershwin's musical works were ________.
A.written about New YorkersB.composed for Paul Whiteman
C.performed in various waysD.played mainly in the countryside
2. What do we know about the concert organized by Whiteman?
A.It proved jazz could be serious music.
B.It attracted more people to theatres.
C.It made Gershwin leader of the orchestra.
D.It caused a debate among jazz musicians.
3. What did Gershwin do during his stay in Paris?
A.He studied with Nadia Boulanger.B.He created one of his best works.
C.He argued with French critics.D.He changed his music style.
4. What do we learn from the last paragraph?
A.The death of Gershwin was widely reported.
B.Many of Gershwin's works were lost.
C.A concert was held in memory of Gershwin.
D.Brain cancer research started after Gershwin's death.
5. Which of the following best describes Gershwin?
A.Serious and boring.B.Talented and productive.
C.Popular and unhappy.D.Friendly and honest.
2020-02-09更新 | 119次组卷 | 1卷引用:天津市四合庄中学2019-2020学年高二上学期第一次月考英语试题
共计 平均难度:一般