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阅读理解-阅读单选(约360词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇说明文,文章主要阐述了目前全球都在发展环保节能的电动汽车,但是铅酸电池中的铅是危险的,任何接触都对人体健康,铅中毒给人类健康、财富和福利造成的巨大损害,不仅造成死亡还带来极大的社会负担。

1 . In the rich countries of the West, the electric vehicle revolution is well underway. Climate-conscious consumers drive Teslas or Polestars for reasons of morality and fashion. Poorer countries are also experiencing a wave of electrified trend. In Bangladesh, electric three-wheeler taxis, known as tuk-tuks, are rapidly replacing gas-powered ones on the streets. Such electric vehicles are climate friendly, cost effective, and help reduce air pollution.

Yet a glance under the hood (引擎盖) of these vehicles reveals a poisonous secret: each tuk-tuk runs on five massive lead-acid batteries, containing almost 300 pounds of lead in total. Every year and a half or so, when those batteries need to be replaced and recycled, about 60 pounds of lead leak into the environment. Battery recycling, often at small-scale unregulated factories, is a highly profitable but deadly business.

Lead is dangerous, and any exposure to it is harmful to human health. Lead that has entered the environment hurts people on an extraordinary scale. The numerous ways lead enters air, water, soil, and homes across the developing world — and the enormous damage it does to human health, wealth, and welfare — causes one of the biggest environmental crises in the world yet receives little attention.

The World Bank estimates that lead kills 5. 5 million people per year, which would make it a bigger global killer than AIDS, malaria, diabetes, and road traffic deaths combined. On top of the shocking deaths, the social burden of lead poisoning is extraordinary, as is its contribution to global inequality — our research on the cognitive effects of lead poisoning suggests that it may explain about one-fifth of the educational achievement gap between rich and poor countries.

But unlike many challenges faced by developing countries, lead poisoning is a problem that is fixable with some attention and a relatively modest financial investment. Better monitoring, research, and rules can help protect children all over the world from the dreadful effects of lead poisoning and reduce the massive global costs it brings.

1. How does the author describe the lead problem in paragraph 2?
A.By making a comparison.B.By analyzing hidden causes.
C.By listing convincing numbers.D.By explaining its working principle.
2. What can we learn from the text?
A.Lead enters rich countries in various ways.
B.Lead poisoning may make poor societies poorer.
C.Exposure to lead doesn’t necessarily harm someone.
D.Lead leaking has caused great panic in both countries.
3. What can be done to solve lead poisoning in developing countries?
A.Fixing these used batteries.B.Putting certain effort and money.
C.Prohibiting the illegal use of lead.D.Reducing the cost of recycling lead.
4. Which of the following is the best title for the text?
A.The Impacts of Lead Poisoning on Human Health
B.The Outcomes of Using Electric Vehicles
C.The Ways to Solve Lead Problem
D.The Global Lead Poisoning Crisis
阅读理解-阅读单选(约300词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:本文是一篇说明文,主要讲述了丢弃轮胎一直以来就是一个问题,一些较好的回收方法也不环保,但现在有了一个好的想法,那就是把旧轮胎变为环保材料。

2 . Getting rid of(丢弃) old tyres(轮胎) has long been a problem. Every year many tyres are thrown. Some of the ways might be better than getting rid of them, but they are not especially green.

Energy recovery(回收利用) is one common way. This includes burning tyres to produce electricity, or as a way to provide heat for other industrial processes. But that produces planet-warming pollution. Tyres can be whole or broken in construction projects, such as repairing roads. There are, however, worries about chemicals from the tyres coming out and polluting the ground.

So some companies have begun exploring another pleasing idea. Since tyres are mostly made from hydrocarbons(碳氢化合物), it should be possible in principle to turn old tyres into environmentally friendly materials which can be used to run some cars they came from. One of the most thoughtful companies is based in Oslo, Norway. Later this year the company will start building a huge tyre-reused factory in Sunderland in northeastern England. In a couple of years, when the factory is fully operational, it will be able to turn 8 million old tyres into new products.

The process works by dividing a tyre into its three main parts. One is steel, which is used to support the structure of a tyre and which can be easily reused. The second is powder used to improve the continuous use of the tyre. The third is rubber. Some of that will be natural rubber from the rubber trees. The carbon black can be reused to make new tyres. That is of interest to tyre makers because it helps efforts to become carbon neutral(碳中和).

1. What is the disadvantage of energy recovery of tyres mentioned in the text?
A.It is unpractical.B.It produces pollution.
C.It costs a lot.D.It produces less electricity.
2. How is paragraph 3 organized?
A.By giving an example.B.By making questions.
C.By following time order.D.By comparing differences.
3. Which of the following best describes the huge tyre-reused factory?
A.Costly.B.Useful.C.Dangerous.D.Short-lived.
4. Which of the following is the best title for the text?
A.Tyres can be divided into three parts
B.A company built a tyre-reused factory
C.Energy recovery can deal with old tyres
D.Old tyres can become environmentally friendly materials
阅读理解-阅读单选(约360词) | 较易(0.85) |
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文章大意:本文为一篇说明文,全文介绍了欧洲干旱情况日益加重导致的一系列后果。

3 . The sound of leaves underfoot is usually associated with autumn. But this year, it was the soundtrack to summer walks across Europe, as maximum temperature records fell and the continent suffered its worst drought in 500 years.

The drought had been building for months after a dry winter and spring, but it was worse by a series of fierce heatwaves over the summer, says Sim on Parry at the UK Centre for Ecology &Hydrology. In France, nuclear power plants were forced to reduce their output as low river flows meant there wasn’t enough water to cool their reactors. Water levels on the Rhine river dropped so far that ships loaded with goods in Germany and the Netherlands, including coal and petrol, were unable to travel. Besides, farmers saw crops wither(枯萎). Harvests of soya-beans and sunflower seeds were predicted to fall by between12 and 16 percent.

This was a crisis caused in large part by climate change, says Richard Allan, who is also at the University of Reading. “Warming due to human-caused climate change made this event much more extreme,” he says. Studies suggest that the drought was made at least 20 times more likely by global warming.

However, that missing rainfall ends up somewhere, says Peter Gleick at the Pacific Institute in California. This year’s disastrous floods in countries including Australia and Pakistan are the “flip side” of the droughts, he says. “The droughts and the extreme floods that we are seeing are tied together, and are part and parcel of the broader challenge of climate change,” says Gleick.

In the wake of a drought, it is critical that nature gets time to recover. But for Europe, this was the second severe drought in four years. “My grass has already recovered from this summer... but if I had a tree that survived it, that would take 10 years or more to get back to a normal state,” says Niko Wanders at Utrecht University in the Netherlands.

1. What is the author’s purpose in mentioning the sound?
A.To show the seasonal cycle.B.To describe the beauty of autumn.
C.To emphasize the dry weather.D.To clarify trees’ survival mode.
2. What is paragraph 2 of the text mainly about?
A.The reduction of river water.B.The duration(持续)of the drought.
C.The causes of various losses.D.The consequences of the disaster.
3. Which is probably the best way to tackle climate change according to the text?
A.Expanding climate monitoring.B.Improving human behavior.
C.Promoting natural restoration.D.Balancing water distribution.
4. What is the author’s attitude toward the climate change trend in Europe?
A.Conservative.B.Unclear.C.Concerned.D.Hopeful.
阅读理解-阅读单选(约350词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文一篇新闻报道。中国官员宣布,经过几十年的努力,大熊猫不再是濒危物种,中国将大熊猫从濒危物种重新分类为易受伤害物种;文章还介绍了大熊猫的生活习性以及相关人员对中国保护大熊猫所做出的努力的看法。

4 . After decades of work trying to save the giant panda, Chinese officials have announced the species is no longer endangered. The pandas have been reclassified in the country from endangered to vulnerable (易危的) after efforts to increase the population. Now the number has risen to 1,800 in the wild.

“China has established a relatively complete nature reserves system,” Cui Shuhong, director of the Department of Natural Ecological Protection of the Ministry of Ecology and Environment, said on Wednesday. “Large areas of natural ecosystems have been systematically and completely protected, and wildlife habitats have been effectively improved.” The latest classification upgrade reflects their improved living conditions and China’s efforts in keeping their habitats integrated, Cui added.

Bamboo makes up 90% of pandas’ diets, and the animals would likely starve without the shoots (竹笋). Experts believe China’s efforts to replant bamboo forests have been the key to the increase in the population of pandas. Generally speaking, a panda has to eat at least 26 pounds of bamboo every day to maintain its energy, so large areas of bamboo forests are primary to their survival.

Planting bamboo also has advantages for the planet, as the bamboo is grass, not a tree, and is incredibly efficient at absorbing carbon dioxide, as well as emitting (排放) 35% more oxygen than trees.

“The Chinese have done a great job in investing in panda habitats, expanding and setting up new reserves,” Ginette Hemley, senior vice president of conservation at the World Wildlife Fund, told the media. “They are a wonderful example of what can happen when a government is committed to conservation.”

Continuing China’s success will be dependent on the country protecting land from agricultural and urban development. As land becomes rarer, measures will need to be extended to protect more land, to ensure bamboo forests can thrive and as a result, protect the future of the world’s most lovable, lazy, and monochrome (black and white) creature.

1. What do we know about the giant panda according to paragraph 1?
A.It is an endangered species.B.It increases by 1,800 each year.
C.It has seen a decline in population.D.It has got a classification upgrade.
2. What can be inferred from Ginette Hemley’s words?
A.Social media makes a difference.B.Panda habitats are getting smaller.
C.Government’s commitment is crucial.D.Setting up new reserves is impossible.
3. What can be the challenge China faces in achieving continued success?
A.Lazy and monochrome animals.
B.Lack of support from the World Wildlife Fund.
C.The emission of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.
D.The influence of agricultural and urban development.
4. Where is this text probably from?
A.A news report.B.A educational journal.
C.A travel magazine.D.A biology textbook.
智能选题,一键自动生成优质试卷~
阅读理解-阅读单选(约290词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。这篇文章主要讲述了现代交通和通信手段使世界变得更加紧密,但也带来了污染问题。污染的形式多种多样,包括空气、水和噪音污染。因此文章呼吁人们保护地球,保持土地、水和空气的清洁。

5 . The world itself is becoming much smaller by using modern traffic and modern communication means. Life today is much easier than it was hundreds of years ago, but it has brought new problems. One of the biggest problems is pollution. To pollute means to make things dirty. Pollution comes in many ways. We see it, smell it, drink it and even hear it.

Man has been polluting the earth. The more people, the more pollution. Many years ago, the problem was not so serious because there were not so many people. When the land was used up or the river was dirty in one place, man moved to another place. But this is no longer true. Man is now slowly polluting the whole world.

Air pollution is still the most serious. It’s bad for all living things in the world, but it is not the only one kind of pollution. Water pollution kills our fish and pollutes our drinking water. Noise pollution makes us angry more easily.

Many countries are making rules to fight pollution. They stop people from burning coal in houses and factories in the city, and from putting dirty smoke into the air. Pollution by S02 is now the most dangerous kind of air pollution. It is caused by heavy traffic. We are sure that if there are fewer people driving, there will be less air pollution.

The earth is our home. We must take care of it. That means keeping the land, water and air clean. And we must care about the rise in pollution at the same time.

1. Why is our world becoming much smaller?
A.Thanks to the development of science.
B.Because of the rise in pollution.
C.Because the earth is being polluted day and night.
D.Because the earth is blown away by the wind every year.
2. What does the underline word “it” in Paragraph 1 mean?
A.Rubbish.B.Water pollution.
C.Air pollution.D.Noise pollution.
3. Why is air pollution called the most serious kind of pollution?
A.Because it’s bad for all living things in the world.
B.Because it makes much noise.
C.Because it has made our rivers and lakes dirty.
D.Because it makes us become angry more easily.
4. Which of the following is NOT true?
A.Many countries are making rules to fight pollution.
B.The problem of pollution is not so serious because there are not so many people living on the earth.
C.The pollution of the earth grows as fast as the world population does.
D.If people could go to work by bus or bike instead of car or motorbike, it would be helpful in fighting against the problem of S02.
阅读理解-阅读单选(约400词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇记叙文。文章主要讲述了研究员黄晖为保护珊瑚礁而做出的努力。

6 . In 2002, Huang Hui, a researcher of the South China Sea Institute of Oceanology, went diving near Xisha. In addition to getting an irremovable suntan (晒黑), she was left with memories of a beautiful experience with clear water and abundant colorful corals (珊瑚). However, much of the breathtaking scenery of this reef has disappeared due to climate change and human activities. All of these factors led to the decline of the coral reef in the near shore waters. “We started to cultivate corals near the Xisha Islands in 2010, and restored more than 200,000 square meters of coral reefs,” Huang said.

In 2004, when Huang was attending the 10th International Coral Reef Symposium, she found herself the only representative from the Chinese mainland. She said she felt sad but she made up her mind to strengthen communication with other countries to improve China’s level and status in coral research. She visited top coral research institutes in the US and Australia, establishing long-term cooperation with some of the world’s top coral researchers. By far, Huang has worked on coral research and protection for 22 years. Now, China is in a leading position in terms of technology and coral planting scale.

Huang believes that people’s consciousness of coral protection matters most to the sustainable development of the coral reefs. “I want to call on more people to love nature and look at the ocean in awe,” Huang said.

Partly due to her efforts, Hainan Province released a law in 2017 banning reef exploitation (开发), trading and damaging.

Huang works as a consultant for customs and frontier police on coral protection and promotes coral protection in her local schools. Huang also provides online free training for divers to teach them proper behavior in the sea to protect coral reefs.

“A group of ‘folk scientists’ have also been trained with the hope that more people can gain awareness of the significance of coral reef protection and know how to protect them,” said Huang.

“I am 50, and when I become 60, I hope that not only a coral island will be built but a sustainable development pattern will also be created,” said Huang. “The ideal state is that the coral island should be able to support fishermen and preserve the ecosystem,” she added.

1. What impressed Huang most when going diving near Xisha in 2002?
A.A permanent sunburn on her skin.
B.A large quantity of colorful corals.
C.A sweet memory of her childhood.
D.The sudden disappearance of corals.

2. What does Paragraph 2 mainly focus on?
A.China’s advances in coral protection.B.Huang’s devotion to coral protection.
C.Huang’s concern over coral protection.D.People’s ignorance of coral protection.
3. What is the key to protecting corals according to Huang Hui?
A.Introduction of advanced technology.
B.Tough laws banning reef exploitation.
C.Public awareness of coral protection.
D.Communication with foreign countries.
4. What is the best title for this passage?
A.Corals in South China Sea are in danger.
B.Scientist plants corals to save ecosystem.
C.China is taking the lead in planting corals.
D.Measures are to be taken to protect corals.
阅读理解-阅读单选(约360词) | 较难(0.4) |
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章通过俄亥俄州一位科学家做的实验,说明气候变化不可以在不改变人类行为的情况下得到解决的,同时几位科学家预测将来我们可以成功控制住气候。

7 . Several years ago, Jason Box, a scientist from Ohio, flew 31 giant rolls of white plastic to a glacier (冰川) in Greenland. He and his team spread them across 10,000 feet of ice, and then left. His idea was that the white blanket would reflect back the rays of the sun, keeping the ice cool below. When he came back to check the results, he found it worked. Exposed ice had melted faster than covered ice. He had not only saved two feet of glacier in a short time. No coal plants (煤炭工厂) were shut down, no jobs were lost, and nobody was taxed or fired. Just the sort of fix we’re looking for.

“Thank you, but no thank you.” says Ralph King, a climate scientist. He told Grey Childs, author and commentator, that people think technology can save the planet, “but there are other things we need to deal with, like consumption (消费). They burned $50,000 just for the helicopter to bring the plastic to the glacier. ”This experiment gives people false hope that climate change can be fixed (解决,处理) without changing human behavior. . It can’t. Technology won’t give us a free ride (搭便车).

Individuals respond to climate change differently. Climatologist Kelly Smith is hardly alone in her prediction that someday soon we won’t be climate victims; we will be climate choosers. More scientists agree with her that if the human race survives, the engineers will get smarter, the tools will get better, and one day we will control the climate. But what then? "Just the mention of us controlling the climate sent a small shiver (颤抖) down my back”, Grey Childs writes, “Something sounds wrong about it.”

Me? I like it better when the earth takes care of itself. I guess one day we will have to run the place, but for the moment, sitting at my desk. looking out at the trees bending wildly and the wind howling. I’m happy not to be in charge.

1. What does Ralph King think of Jason Box’s experiment?
A.It’s a possible solution to climate change.
B.It’s a misleading attempt to fix the climate.
C.It’s a successful experiment on saving the glacier.
D.It arouses people’s attention to the problem of global warming.
2. Which statement would Kelly Smith most probably agree with?
A.The fight against climate change will not succeed.
B.Humans will succeed in controlling climate in the future.
C.Technology is not the final solution, let alone its high cost.
D.Jason’s experiment plays a significant role in fixing climate change.
3. What is Grey Childs’s attitude to human’s controlling the climate?
A.Supportive.B.Tolerant (容忍的).
C.Sceptical (怀疑的).D.Unclear.
4. Which of the following is a suitable title for the text?
A.Should we fix the climate with technology?B.Is climate change a threatening problem?
C.Why is the earth climate getting worse?D.What if all the glaciers disappeared?
改错-短文改错 | 较易(0.85) |
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8 . 下面一篇文章中共有10处语言错误,每句中最多有两处。错误涉及一个单词的增加、删除或修改。
增加:在缺词处加一个漏字符号(∧),并在其下面写出该加的词。
删除:把多余的词用斜线(\)划掉。
修改:在错的词下划一横线,并在该词下面写出修改后的词。
注意:1. 每处错误及修改均仅限一词;
2. 只允许修改10处,多者(从第11处起)不计分。

A big storm destroyed two villages in South Africa on last Friday, causing 4 death. Over 200 people became homeless as a result of the storm. A farmer said the storm began early in the morning and last one hour. He said, “I was cooking in the kitchen with my wife and children while we heard a loud noise. A few minutes late, our house fell down. I managed to climb out, but much to my shocking, one of my boys were missing. I quickly went back inside and found them safe but frightened.” Soldiers came to rescue those burying under the ruins, and the government provided food, clothes, and shelters for homeless.

阅读理解-阅读单选(约310词) | 较易(0.85) |

9 . When it comes to sharks, many people think of their pointy fins and violent nature. But there is more to sharks than their sharp teeth: The creature appeared on earth 410 million years ago, before dinosaurs.

However, sharks are now at the edge of extinction. Numbers of sharks have decreased by 71% over the past 50 years, according to the research published in Nature. “Such sharp decreases are shocking even to experts, especially when compared to land animal statistics,” Sonja Fordham at Shark Advocates International told New Scientist magazine. “This data(数据) may be an underestimate(低估) of reality because of unreported fish catches,” noted Nathan Pacoureau, a researcher of the study team.

The study included 31 species; 24 now risk extinction, and 3 shark species are now classified as highly endangered. The study found the decrease hit the largest species first before influencing smaller ones over time, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature. It also said that shark finning and fishing worldwide have driven the decrease. “The Indian Ocean is the worst. There is almost no fishery management at all,” said Pacoureau.

“Overfishing of sharks destroys the health of entire ocean ecosystems as well as food safety for some countries,” said Nicholas Dulvy, a professor of Simon Fraser University in British Columbia, Canada. “The researchers are calling on immediate action to ensure a brighter future for these animals,” according to the BBC.

Although the situation looks depressing, the future of sharks is not doomed(注定)yet. 25 species have recovered because of long-term protection campaigns in the past decades. A couple of shark species have started to recover through science-based fishing limits. These examples provide living evidence that the world can set and meet biodiversity goals.

1. What can we know about sharks from the text?
A.They are faced with a bad situation.
B.They began to exist later than dinosaurs.
C.They are well preserved in the Indian Ocean.
D.They became an extinct species 5 decades ago.
2. Why are the data not exactly true according to Nathan Pacoureau?
A.They just focus on the largest species.
B.They may leave out unreported situations.
C.They disagree with some experts’ judgements.
D.They are only compared with those of land animals.
3. What is the leading cause of the sharks’ decrease?
A.Overfishing.B.Natural disasters.
C.The ocean pollution.D.Food source shortage.
4. How is the future of sharks according to the text?
A.Hopeless.B.Bright.C.Dark.D.Unclear.
语法填空-短文语填(约180词) | 适中(0.65) |
10 . 阅读下面短文,在空白处填入1个适当的单词或括号内单词的正确形式,并将答案填写在答题卡相应的位置上。

How much do you know about the Amazon rainforest? It is without doubt one of the true    1    (wonder) of the world. The Amazon rainforest is of great    2    (important) because it is home to thousands of animals, birds and insects.

The Amazon rainforest is in South America,    3    (cover) most of the Amazon basin of South America. It travels across 9 different countries.    4    (actual), the Amazon rainforest is the    5    (large) rainforest in the world and it has been around for at least 55 million years, Many of the medicines that we use today are from plants in the rainforest.    6    , about 2.7 million acres(英亩) of the rainforest    7    (ruin) each year, which is bad for everyone as forests and trees help to keep our air clean. Scientists think that if climate changes are to increase the world's temperature    8    only 3℃, then 75% of the Amazon rainforest will be destroyed. If all the forests continue to be cut down, 137 rainforest species will be destroyed every single day! That is    9    (frighten). The Amazon rainforest is a very precious place on Earth, and we    10    protect it to make it survive for years to come.

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