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阅读理解-阅读单选(约370词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍了对许多环保主义者来说,世界似乎越来越糟,而作者却认为世界环境其实并没有看上去那么糟糕,同时分析了导致了人们这种认知与现实脱节的几个因素。

1 . In the eyes of many environmentalists, the world appears to be getting worse. They believe, the natural resources are running out and the air and water are becoming ever more polluted. But if we check the facts, things look different. Energy has become more abundant, not less so. Fewer people are starving. What seems to cause this gap between perception and reality?

One factor is the prejudice in scientific research. Scientific funding goes mainly to areas with many problems. That may be wise policy, but it will also create an impression that there are more potential problems than actually exist.

Secondly, environmental groups seek attention from the mass media. They also need to get continuous financial support. Understandably, perhaps, they sometimes exaggerate (夸大) their arguments. In 1997, for example, the World Wide Fund for Nature issued a statement titled: “Two thirds of the world’s forests lost forever”. The truth turns out to be near 20%.

The media can add to confusion too. People tend to be more curious about bad news than good. Newspapers and broadcasters are there to provide what the public wants. That, however, can lead to significant misinterpretations. For example, when a natural disaster happens, the media usually highlights the negative parts, giving more attention to the disaster’s details and what happens afterward. This flood of bad news can make people think that such events are more frequent or serious than they actually are. Consequently, people may develop a sense of insecurity, despite statistically low probabilities of similar events happening to them.

Another factor is people’s poor perception. People worry that vaccines can cause severe side effects or long-term health problems. Despite extensive scientific evidence demonstrating their safety and effectiveness, some individuals remain hesitant due to unfounded fears.

It is crucial that we look at the facts if we want to make the best possible decisions for the future. It may be costly to be overly optimistic – but more costly still to be too pessimistic.

1. What aspect of scientific research does the writer worry about in paragraph 2?
A.The need to produce results.B.The selection of research areas.
C.The lack of financial support.D.The desire to solve research problem.
2. Why does the writer quote the example from the World Wide Fund for Nature?
A.To show how influential the mass media can be.
B.To show how effective environmental groups can be.
C.To show how the mass media can help groups raise funds.
D.To show how environmental groups overstate their claims.
3. The writer suggests that newspapers publish articles that are intended to ________.
A.educate readersB.mislead readers
C.meet readers’ expectationsD.encourage readers’ feedback
4. What does the author try to convey in the last paragraph?
A.Making decisions based on reality.B.Balancing optimism and pessimism.
C.Being optimistic to avoid costly mistakes.D.Addressing the environmental crisis gradually.
今日更新 | 47次组卷 | 1卷引用:2024届广东省佛山市顺德区普通高中高三5月适应性考试英语试题
语法填空-短文语填(约190词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇新闻报道。文章报道了故宫博物院开展“故宮零废弃”运动的情况。
2 . 阅读下面短文, 在空白处填入1个适当的单词或括号内所给单词的正确形式。

The Palace Museum is becoming waste-free as the 720,000-square-meter structure has managed     1     (reduce) the number of rubbish bins to 110 sets in areas open to the public. This is a decrease from 310 sets     2     (record) in January 2020, when a zero-waste campaign     3     (launch), said the museum.

While protecting features of the six-century-old historical relic, the action also helps visitors and tourists get into     4     habit of creating less waste. Up to now, four types of rubbish bins have been equipped following Beijing’s regulations on the management of household waste. Cleaning staff also check them to make sure all rubbish is     5     (correct) sorted, which is later transported to different destinations for disposal (处理). The museum also recycled more than 32,000 plastic     6     (bottle) to make cultural and creative products between June 2021 and October 2023,     7     (mean) a reduction in carbon emission by 931 kilograms.

By launching the campaign, the Palace Museum is taking a careful, science-based way to waste management. The target is to minimize the production of waste     8     needs to be buried or burned and bring the amount of such waste as close     9     zero as possible.

So far, about 3,000 museum staff members, 40,000 tourist guides, and 21 million visitors     10     (participate) in the campaign.

2024-05-18更新 | 34次组卷 | 1卷引用:广东省佛山市S6高质量发展联盟2023-2024学年高二下学期期中联考英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约370词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:这是一篇新闻报道。主要说明了加拿大人Robert Perkins为了为野生动物创造栖息地,同时表达对妻子的爱,建造了一个水景。

3 . We’re often told to follow our dreams, and one person in Canada has done just that after building a wonderland for animals. In his own backyard, the eight water features which Robert Perkins dug into the ground are now a shelter for birds, frogs, beavers (河狸) and other animals in the middle of suburban development. But for Perkins, creating habitat for wildlife is not only about doing his part to help the environment. It’s a labor of love for a woman he met when he was 16 years old.

Perkins met Rhonda in 1974 and the two of them hit it off. They both loved animals, and she always wished to have a place where they could live in harmony with the land. Rhonda, whom Perkins stayed with all his life, passed away in 2006. Perkins resolved to build a wonderland where her spirit could stay in peace.

Ignoring planning departments and neighbors alike, Perkins began digging large holes for water to flow. Over the course of nine years his property went from being a neighborly headache to a perfect home for wildlife.

Perkins says he won’t take all the credit for the wetland he built. When Perkins started creating the wildlife habitat in the early 2000s, a family of beavers got wind of it soon and claimed the land. “When we built our subdivisions, we cleared all the trees, dried the hills, drove all the water down to the lakes... In turn, the beavers helped dam (筑坝) and purify the water.”

Wetland habitats not only attract wildlife, but probably offer the most complete package of ecosystem services, including preventing pollution, enriching the soil, and promoting the well-being of wildlife species.

Perkins says he doesn’t need to wonder what Rhonda might think of the place; he feels her presence whenever he walks alone among the trees, the grass, and the ponds, looking at birds or beavers, and listening to the songbirds and frogs. Perkins hopes his project will one day become an educational place that local people can visit to learn about the importance of wetlands.

1. Why did Perkins build the water features?
A.To fulfill his childhood dream.B.To show his love for his wife.
C.To preserve endangered wildlife.D.To adapt to suburban development.
2. Which best describes Perkins’ wetland building process?
A.Effortless but creative.B.Discouraging but efficient.
C.Painful but influential.D.Demanding but rewarding.
3. What can we infer about building the wetland from Perkins’ words?
A.Perkins had a strategic plan for it.B.Human’s role in it was overvalued.
C.Nature itself also played a part in it.D.Beavers were invited to help with it.
4. What is Perkins’s expectation of the wetland?
A.To help spread his story.B.To be a recreational spot.
C.To bring economic value.D.To serve as an inspiration.
2024-04-16更新 | 330次组卷 | 1卷引用:2024届广东省佛山市高三下学期二模英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约320词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。科研人员通过研究发现,微塑料的传播不局限于本地传播,还可通过空气在全球范围内传播。

4 . Carried by the wind, dust particles (微粒) from places such as the Sahara Desert can float halfway around the world before settling to the ground. As the plastics abandoned by humans break down into tiny pieces in the environment, they, too, travel through the atmosphere. Now scientists are a step closer to understanding how these microplastics travel in the globe — both locally and on long-distance flights.

Researchers spent more than a year collecting microplastics from 11 national parks and wilderness areas in the western U.S. They examined the particles that settled on dry days and those that fell along with rain or snow. In addition to making clear how microplastics move around, the results, published on Thursday in Science, reveal the seriousness of the problem: more than 1 million kilograms of microplastics — the weight of 120 million to 300 million plastic water bottles — fall on protected lands in the country’s western region each year.

The new findings add to scientists’ concern over microplastic pollution’s potential impacts on the environment and human health. “We’re not supposed to breathe in this material,” says Steve Allen, a microplastics researcher at the University of Strathclyde in Scotland, who was not involved in the new study. “Plastics in the environment “carry all sorts of pesticides (农药), heavy metals and all the other chemicals that we’ve made over time,” he adds. “They’re going to carry them directly into our lungs.”

Since their discovery in oceans in the 1970s, microplastics — which can be as large as a grain of rice or smaller than a particle of dust — have been found nearly everywhere researchers have looked: in cities, in Arctic snow, on remote mountaintops. Their presence in areas distant from the place where human live has pointed to them being carried by winds.

1. What do the scientists further understand now?
A.Why Sahara Desert is expanding to the south of Africa.
B.How plastic particles travel on the wind.
C.Why it is hard for plastics to break down.
D.How dust particles are spreading through the wind.
2. What do we know about the new study?
A.The results showed the amount of microplastics is huge.
B.Researchers collected microplastics across the U.S.
C.Researchers focused on plastic particles in dry days.
D.Numerous plastic water bottles were found each year.
3. What does Steve Allen say about plastics?
A.They should be recycled.B.They do harm to weather.
C.They can be used to make all sorts of pesticides.D.They carry harmful chemicals to human lungs.
4. What would be the best title for the passage?
A.Dust Particles Is Harmful to Our LungsB.The Environment Is Threatened by Plastics
C.Microplastics Are Falling from the SkyD.Microplastics Do Harm to Health
智能选题,一键自动生成优质试卷~

5 . Where did the idea of “white bikes” come from? In the 1960s, a group of cycling fans came up with an idea. They believed that it would be better for everybody if cars weren’t allowed in the city centre and only bicycles were. They were hopeful that this would help to save energy, reduce pollution and provide free public transport. The group painted hundreds of bicycles white and placed them in many areas around Amsterdam for people to use. Anyone was allowed to take them and use them for short journeys. People would leave the bike in the place where they finished their journey, so that someone else could then take it and use it from there. Soon after, however, problems came up and the “white bikes” all disappeared — thieves stole them all in a matter of weeks!


Why did the group come up with the idea of “white bikes”?
A.To ensure traffic safety.B.To reduce transport costs.
C.To encourage physical activity.D.To promote green transport.
2023-12-12更新 | 10次组卷 | 1卷引用:广东省佛山市南海区2023-2024学年高二上学期“升基工程”学业水平监测英语试卷
阅读理解-七选五(约260词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章提供了一些在飓风天气下加强家庭安全的方法。

6 . Hurricane season can be wild and unpredictable.    1     Here are some ways you can beef up(增加) your home security in hurricane weather, even if you need to move out.

    2    That actually does nothing to ensure your safety in the powerful winds. Sticking to hurricane shelters or plywood(胶合板) is the only way to go when it comes to protecting those points of entry in hurricane conditions. Buy sheets of plywood, measure your windows and use brackets(支架) to hold the plywood in place.

Sandbags are very useful. While sandbags won’t be able to help in the extreme storm, many people will be able to prevent flooding and extensive damage to their belongings by placing sandbags.    3    Any storm water that is kept out of your home is storm water that won’t be able to damage the belongings inside your home, so sandbags are well worth having at your doorways during a hurricane.

It important to prepare the inside of your home for strong winds and rain. But you should also keep an eye on the outside of your house, too. Trim(修剪) trees, especially dead branches, to prevent anything else that could fly through a window and cause damage during a hurricane.    4    

You should also take pictures of expensive items like electronics and keep notes of their serial numbers.    5    Also, there are always bad people outright after a storm. If the worst happens and your home is broken into right after a bad storm, having pictures and detailed notes about what was in your home prior to the hurricane will make it easier for police to track down stolen items.

A.You should have a camera at home.
B.It can be strong enough to resist the forceful winds.
C.Making sure nothing is loose in your yard is important.
D.These dangerous storms can bring damage to your home and belongings.
E.They will be able to effectively keep storm water out in many cases.
F.It will aid with your insurance company if anything needs to be replaced.
G.You may see people attaching windows with sticky tape before a hurricane comes.
阅读理解-阅读单选(约370词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。主要介绍了人们使用家用清洁器,重复使用塑料容器,减少塑料的使用,降低塑料污染。

7 . Every week, Angela looked at her recycling bin, filled with shampoo bottles and plastic containers, with mixed feelings. Sure, it was a lot of plastic, but it was going to be recycled. Or so she thought. Then, her husband sent her some articles revealing that less than 6% of the country’s plastic gets recycled. She was shocked.

Determined to cut back on her plastic consumption, Angela got a starter kit from a company selling refillable household cleaners (家用清洁器). In it were tablets, containing concentrated hand soap as well as glass and bathroom cleaners, and four empty containers. She filled each one with tap water, then dropped in a tablet and watched it dissolve. If she was happy with the cleaners, she would order more tablets but reuse the containers. No new plastic required.

Given plastic’s harmful effects on the environment, nearly three quarters of Americans say they are trying to reduce their reliance on single-use plastic, according to Pew Research Center. Since plastic is everywhere and avoiding it altogether is extraordinarily difficult, some, like Angela, have revived a once-customary practice: refilling containers. Household cleaners seem particularly prepared for a refill revolution, for many can be easily concentrated and reconstituted (with water. If just 10% to 20% of plastic packaging are reused, a report from the World Economic Forum estimates, the amount of plastic waste entering the ocean will be cut in half.

Not everyone is as enthusiastic, though. Jan Dell, a chemical engineer, noted that many cleaning products are packaged in PET or HDPE, two types of plastic with relatively high recycling rates. So she is less concerned about them but far more concerned about the packaging of other products. “What companies should be focusing on is everything else that isn’t recyclable, that is single use and that often becomes plastic pollution,” she said, pointing to plastic bags and cups. “This is just a classic example of big corporations doing something to attract people’s attention over here on something that’s not the main issue to distract from all the single-use plastic they’re pushing out.”

1. Why is Angela mentioned?
A.To promote a tablet.B.To lead in the topic.
C.To clarify a concept.D.To recommend a kit.
2. What does the underlined word “dissolve” in paragraph 2 mean?
A.Float over water.B.Turn over in water.
C.Change color in water.D.Mix with water.
3. What’s Jan Dell’s attitude towards the deeds of big corporations?
A.Critical.B.Favourable.
C.Conservative.D.Unconcerned.
4. Where is the text probably taken from?
A.A chemistry paper.B.An academic report.
C.A lifestyle magazine.D.A cleaner advertisement.
阅读理解-阅读单选(约440词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:本文是新闻报道。讲述了墨西哥的Dzilam保护区在华为云技术的帮助下确定了保护区内的物种,为保护物种多样性做出卓越贡献。

8 . Only a “cloud” away is how residents at the Dzilam reserve in Mexico think of the distance between Latin America and China, despite their geographical remoteness.

The “cloud” isn’t the one hanging up in the sky. What the residents refer to is in fact cloud technology, which has been applied to wildlife conservation in this Mexican reserve.

In recent years, with cloud technology, technicians and ecologists from China and its trans-Pacific partners have been able to work hand in hand under the Belt and Road Initiative to protect endangered species and their habitats in Mexico.

Home to many endangered species in Mexico, the Dzilam reserve, known for its biodiversity-rich habitats, has started to witness ecosystem degradation (衰退) over the years due to human activities and climate change. In 2002, the jaguar, the only big cat left in the reserve, was listed as “Near Threatened” on the IUCN Red List.

Local communities and environmentalists have tried to track the habitat of jaguars, but have found it rather difficult: These animals are often hidden in vast forests, rarely leaving obvious traces, making it hard to observe them under natural conditions.

To better protect wild animals and biodiversity, the Tech4Nature Mexico project was launched in the Dzilam reserve. The project collects video data from cameras recording 24 hours a day in the Dzilam reserve to monitor the biodiversity of the area and uses acoustic (声学的) technology to understand the existence of species and the health of ecosystems. The research team would use Huawei’s Al model to identify the areas where the big cat appeared by identifying sounds, studying their living habits and developing management plans to protect the species. In addition, when a threat is detected, the system immediately sends a real-time alarm with the location to local forest guards through an app for rapid intervention.

From September 2022 to May 2023, local experts, with the help of Huawei Cloud, have identified 119 species in the Dzilam reserve, including 88 species of birds, 22 species of mammals, five species of reptiles and four species of amphibians, of which 34 species are on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. They have also spotted at least five jaguars in the reserve.

Omelia Trejo, a resident of the Dzilam community, said their dream is “protecting jaguars for a lifetime,” but they worried that in the future, children might only see jaguars in photos. “Thanks to this project, our dream has come true.”

1. What does the underlined word “cloud” in paragraph 1 refer to?
A.A typical weather phenomenon.B.A networked computing technology.
C.The cloud above the Dzilam reserve.D.The distance from Mexico to China.
2. What makes it difficult to track jaguars in the Dzilam reserve?
A.Lack of local community’s support.B.Disapproval from environmentalists.
C.A few clearly recognizable tracks.D.Challenges in natural observation.
3. What does the writer intend to convey in paragraph 7?
A.The urgent need for conservation.B.The challenges of species protection.
C.The success of Tech4Nature Mexico project.D.The diversity of species in the Dzilam reserve.
4. What is the resident’s attitude towards the Tech4Nature Mexico project?
A.PositiveB.DoubtfulC.UnconcemedD.Neutral
2023-11-06更新 | 45次组卷 | 1卷引用:广东省顺德区2023-2024学年高三上学期教学质量检测(一) 英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约370词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇记叙文,主要讲述了伦敦的鸽子正在被用来收集数据,帮助改善城市的空气质量。

9 . Pigeons in London have a bad reputation. Some people call them flying rats. And many blame them for causing pollution with their droppings. But now the birds are being used to fight another kind of pollution in this city of 8.5 million.

“The problem for air pollution is that it’s been largely ignored as an issue for a long time,” says Andrea Lee, who works for the London-based environmental organization Client Earth. “People don’t realize how bad it is, and how it actually affects their health.” London’s poor air quality is linked to nearly 10,000 early deaths a year. Lee says, if people were better informed about the pollution they’re breathing, they could pressure the government to do something about it.

Nearby, on a windy hill in London’s Regent’s Park, an experiment is underway that could help — the first week of flights by the Pigeon Air Patrol. It all began when Pierre Duquesnoy, the director for DigitasLBi, a marketing firm, won a London Design Festival contest last year to show how a world problem could be solved using Twitter. Duquesnoy, from France, chose the problem of air pollution.

“Basically, I realized how important the problem was,” he says. “But also I realized that most of the people around me didn’t know anything about it. “Duquesnoy says he wants to better measure pollution, while at the same time making the results accessible to the public through Twitter.

“So,” he wondered, “how could we go across the city quickly collecting as much data as possible?” Drones were his first thought. But it’s illegal to fly them over London. “But pigeons can fly above London, right?” he says. “They live here — actually, they are Londoners as well. So, yeah, I thought about using pigeons equipped with mobile apps. And we can use not just street pigeons, but racing pigeons, because they fly pretty quickly and pretty low.”

So it might be time for Londoners to have more respect for their pigeons. The birds may just be helping to improve the quality of the city’s air.

1. What can we infer about London’s air quality from Paragraph 2?
A.Londoners are very satisfied with it.
B.The government is trying to improve it.
C.Londoners should pay more attention to it.
D.The government has done a lot to improve it.
2. Why did Duquesnoy give up using drones to fly across London?
A.Because they fly too high.
B.Because they are expensive.
C.Because they fly too quickly.
D.Because they are not allowed.
3. What is the text mainly about?
A.Clean air in London.
B.London’s dirty secret.
C.London’s new pollution fighter.
D.Causes of air pollution in London.
2023-11-02更新 | 71次组卷 | 1卷引用:广东省佛山市第一中学2023-2024学年高一上学期第一次教学质量检测英语试题
语法填空-短文语填(约160词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文为一篇新闻报道。文章报道了日本政府决定开始向海洋排放核废水,这一行为是极其不负责任的,遭到绿色和平组织的批评。
10 . 语法填空

Japan said     1     Tuesday that it had decided to     2     (gradual) release tons of treated wastewater from the ruined Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant (福岛第一核电站) into the ocean,     3     (describe) it as the best solution for dealing with the leftovers (残留物) from the Fukushima nuclear accident, one of the     4     (serious) in the world.

The decision ends years of debate over how to deal with the water,     5     is enough to fill more than 500. Olympic-sized swimming pools. “The Japanese government ignores concerns and strong opposition     6     at home and abroad. Such     7     irresponsible act not only directly harms the interests of the people in Japan’s neighboring countries,     8     threatens the global marine environment and international public health     9     (secure),” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said,

Greenpeace criticized Japan’s plan and said there are other solutions that should     10     (consider). “Rather than using the best available technology to store and process the water over the long term, they have chosen the cheapest solution, dumping the water into the Pacific Ocean.” the group said.

2023-10-29更新 | 58次组卷 | 1卷引用:广东省佛山市南海区南海中学2023-2024学年高二上学期十月月考英语试题
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