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听力选择题-长对话 | 适中(0.65) |
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1 . 听下面一段较长对话,回答以下小题。
1. Why does the woman plan to wear a mask tomorrow?
A.Because of the smog.B.Because of her illness.C.Because of the cold weather.
2. What’s a big problem in the city?
A.The heavy traffic.B.The air pollution.C.The large population.
3. What do the speakers decide to do?
A.Change their ways to go to work.B.Ask the government to do something.
C.Call on people to protect the environment.
4. What can we know about the man?
A.He always uses the public transport.B.He seldom listens to the weather report.
C.He is waiting for the weather to improve soon.
2019-12-27更新 | 62次组卷 | 1卷引用:黑龙江省大庆市第一中学2019-2020学年高一上学期期中英语试题

2 . Record fires sweeping across the Amazon this month have been catching global headlines as scientists and environmental groups are worried that they will worsen climate change and threaten biodiversity(生物多样性).

As the largest rainforest in the world, the Amazon is   often called “the lungs of   the world”. It is also home to about 3 million species of plants and animals, and 1 million local people. The vast lands of rainforest play an important role in the world’s ecosystem because they take in heat instead of it being reflected back into the atmosphere. They also store carbon dioxide (二氧化碳)and produce oxygen, making sure that less carbon is given off, mitigating the effects of climate change.

“Any forest destroyed is a threat to biodiversity and the people who use that biodiversity,” Thomas Lovejoy, an ecologist at George Mason University told National Geographic. “The shocking threat is that a lot of carbon goes into the atmosphere,” he stressed. “Facing the global climate change, we cannot afford more damage to a major source of oxygen and biodiversity. The Amazon must be protected,” U.N. Secretary General Antonio Guterres said.

Data from the National Institute for Space Research (INPE) show that the number of forest fires in Brazil quickly increased by 82 percent from January to August this year from a year ago. A total of 71,497 forest fires were recorded in the country in the first eight months of 2019, up from 39,194 in the same period in 2018, INPE said. “It’s reported that the forest areas in the Brazilian Amazon have decreased something between 20 and 30 percent compared to the last 12 months,” Carlos Nobre, a researcher at the University of Sao Paulo, told German broadcaster Deutsche Welle.

Brazil owns about 60 percent of the Amazon rainforest, whose drop could have severe results for global climate and rainfall. The size of the area ruined by fires has yet to be determined, but the emergency has transcended(超出)Brazil’s borders, reaching Peruvian, Paraguayan and Bolivian areas.

1. What is the second paragraph mainly talking about?
A.The effects of climate change.
B.The role of the Amazon rainforest.
C.The results of the Amazon rainforest fires.
D.The causes of the decreasing biodiversity.
2. Which of the following best explains “mitigating” underlined in Paragraph2?
A.Easing.B.Causing.
C.Worsening.D.Benefiting
3. What can we learn from Thomas’s and Antonio’s words?
A.The biodiversity makes the rainforests unique.
B.The rainforest fires result in serious consequences.
C.The global climate crisis brings more rainforest fires.
D.The dry weather leads to the rainforest fires.
4. Which section of a magazine is this text probably taken from?
A.Sports and music.B.Science and technology.
C.Nature and geography.D.Business and culture.
完形填空(约370词) | 困难(0.15) |
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3 . Hailing from Sweden, “plogging” is a fitness craze that sees participants pick up plastic litter while jogging adding a virtuous, environmentally driven element to the sport. Plogging appears to have started around 2016, but is now going global, due to increasing awareness and __ over plastic levels in the ocean.

The appeal of plogging is its __—all you need is running gear and a bin bag, and the feeling of getting fit while supporting a good cause. By adding regular squats(蹲) to pick up junk and carrying __ to jogging. we can assume the health benefits are increased.

Running and good causes have always gone __ — just think of all the fundraising marathon runners do. But there couldn’t be a more on-trend way of keeping fit than plogging.

Anything that’s getting people out in nature and connecting __ with their environment is a good thing, says Lizzie Carr, an environmentalist who helped set up Plastic Patrol, a nationwide campaign to __ our inland waterways of plastic pollution. There’s been a real __ in the public mindset around plastics, helped by things like Blue Planet highlighting how disastrous the crisis is,” she says.

We need to keep momentum high and the pressure up, and empower people through __ like plogging and Plastic Patrol.

The plastic Patrol app allows users to __ plastic anywhere in the world by collecting discarded items, photographing them and __ to the app, giving us a better knowledge of what sorts of plastic and which brands are being thrown out. “I’d urge all ploggers to get involved,” adds Carr.

Plogging isn’t the first fitness trend to combine running with a good cause, Here are some of our favourites:

Good Gym

Its idea is simple: go for a run, visit an elderly person, have a chat and some tea, and run back.

__ among the elderly is a growing problem in the UK. With over 10,000 runs so far, __, Good Gym is finding a solution.

Guide Running

Guide runners volunteer their time to helping blind people get __. By linking themselves together, the __ —impaired individual can feel safe while both work of a sweat.

___for the Homeless

Start-up Stuart Delivery and the Church Housing Trust collaborated last year in bringing clothing and healthy food to the homeless. Deliveries are mostly made by bike, so those who deliver keep fit while helping rough sleepers(无家可归者).

1.
A.satisfactionB.hesitationC.fearD.control
2.
A.complexityB.simplicityC.instrumentD.expense
3.
A.substanceB.responsibilityC.valueD.weight
4.
A.one on oneB.head to toeC.hand in handD.on and off
5.
A.positivelyB.neutrallyC.objectivelyD.fairly
6.
A.accuseB.ridC.assureD.rob
7.
A.shiftB.interestC.aidD.delight
8.
A.motivesB.performancesC.exercisesD.initiatives
9.
A.eliminateB.mapC.seekD.degrade
10.
A.leadingB.devotingC.endingD.uploading
11.
A.DisappointmentB.TirednessC.SicknessD.Loneliness
12.
A.thereforeB.moreoverC.howeverD.instead
13.
A.excitedB.readyC.activeD.smart
14.
A.visuallyB.audiblyC.visiblyD.sensibly
15.
A.RunningB.PloggingC.DrivingD.Cycling
阅读理解-阅读单选(约300词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:这是一篇记叙文。文章主要讲述了作者姐妹两个人为了不让人们乱认烟头而发起了一个组织,并积极向公司或组织寻求帮助,在过去几年里她们的组织给美国,甚至其他国家带来了影响,她们也因此受到奖项,她们只希望地球环境变得更好。

4 . My sister Alice and I have been trying to get people to stop dropping cigarette (香烟) butts (烟头) for seven years. One day, we were walking in our hometown and saw hundreds of cigarette butts on the ground. They made the town look so ugly that we decided to start a group to make people stop dropping butts. We called it “No Butts About It”.

At first, we drew pictures with “The Earth is not your ashtray (烟灰缸)” written on them. We put the pictures around our hometown—in parks, by beaches, and along roads. We wanted to make people understand that dropping butts hurts the environment. Most smokers don’t think that dropping butts hurts the Earth. But it does, and all rubbish does!

Later, we wrote to companies and asked them for money to help us. We used the money to buy ashtrays to give to smokers. We wanted smokers to carry the ashtrays with them so they didn’t have to drop butts.

At the moment, we are trying to get cigarette companies to put an ashtray in each pack of cigarettes. Some companies want to do it. Many people have started to join our group since it began. Today there are 45 other “No Butts About It” groups in America.

Now there even groups in England, Australia, and India! Many newspapers have written about my sister and me over the last seven years. And we have won many prizes for what we do. But we are not interested in prizes. We just want to make the Earth a better and cleaner place for animals, plants and people.

One day, it will be.

1. What did the writer think about the cigarette butts in the first place?
A.They made the town smelly.B.They made the town unhealthy.
C.They made the town dirty.D.They made the town poor.
2. What does the writer do with the cigarette butts?
A.Give ashtrays to the smokers.B.Stop people buying cigarettes.
C.Pick up the cigarette butts.D.Win prizes for starting groups.
3. From the passage we can know that _____.
A.no companies wanted to give money to them
B.the writer believes that the Earth will be a better and cleaner place
C.there are only 45 “No Butts About It”
D.the writer likes to be on newspapers and win prizes
4. Which is the best tittle for the passage?
A.Save our Town From Cigarette Butts.B.Buy Yourself An Ashtray.
C.Cigarette Butts Also Destroy Other Countries.D.No Butts Prize.
2019·全国·模拟预测
阅读理解-阅读单选(约300词) | 较难(0.4) |
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5 . Darrell Blatchley, a marine biologist and environmentalist based in the Philippine city of Davao, received a call from the Philippines, Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (渔业与水产资源局) early Friday morning reporting a death of a young whale.

When the necropsy (尸检) was performed, Blatchley told NPR, he was not prepared for the amount of plastic they found in the whale’s stomach. “It was full of plastic nothing but nonstop plastic.” he said “It was filled to the point that its stomach was as hard as a baseball.” That means that this animal has been suffering not for days or weeks but for months or even a year or more,” Blatchley added.

Blatchley is the founder and owner of the D’Bone Collector Museum, a natural history museum in Davao. In the coming days, the museum will display all the items found in the whale’s system. Blatchley and his team work with the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources and other organizations to assist in rescue and recovery of marine animals.

“Within the last 10 years, we have recovered 61 whales and dolphins just within the Davao Gulf,” he said. “Of them, 57 have died due to man whether they took plastic or fishing nets or other waste, or gotten caught in pollution — and four were pregnant.”

Blatchley said he hoped that the latest incident would launch the issue of plastic pollution in the Philippines and across the globe. “If we keep going this way, it will be more uncommon to see an animal die of natural causes than it is to see an animal die of plastic,” he said.

1. What can be inferred from the second paragraph?
A.The whale was starved to death.
B.Blatchley was shocked at what he found.
C.The dead whale must have swallowed a baseball.
D.Blatchley didn’t make preparations for the necropsy.
2. What will be shown in the D’Bone Collector Museum?
A.Waste collected from the ocean.
B.The whole system of the whale.
C.Things found in the whale’s body.
D.Many different tools of whaling.
3. What does Blatchley think of plastic pollution in the Philippines?
A.Uncommon.B.Worrying.C.Inspiring.D.Mild.
4. What is the best title for the text?
A.A Whale Found Dead of Plastic
B.Stand Up for Protecting Whales
C.Plastic Threatening Our Existence
D.Natural Death or Merciless Murder
19-20高三上·广东惠州·阶段练习
语法填空-短文语填(约170词) | 适中(0.65) |

6 . Today, Mount Qomolangma’s peak is not a lonely place any more. Over 3500 people have    1     (successful) climbed the mountain over the past years. Meanwhile, climbers have complained about    2    (wait) for hours in the bottlenecks.

In fact, the dangerous    3    (crowd) aren't the only problem. All those climbers need     4    (bring) a lot of gear (装置) and much of them ends up being left on the mountains, becoming the world's    5     (tall) rubbish dump.

But the good news is    6     some mountaineers are overtaking it to clean up Qomolangma. Mountaineers Paul and Eberhard are part of Eco Everest Expedition which has been cleaning up rubbish since 2008. So far they    7    (collect)over 13 tons of garbage.

Some of that rubbish is even being used for    8     higher purpose. As part of the Mount Everest 8844 Art Project. a group of 15 artists Nepal collected 1.5 tons of garbage. They’ve changed the cans and oxygen tanks into 74 piece of art that are exhibited    9    Nepal’s capital. Part of the profit from sales    10     (be) available for the Everest Pakeers Association which has helped ole rubbish of the mountain.

2019-10-20更新 | 470次组卷 | 5卷引用:【高中新教材人教版版同步备课】必修3【新教材精创】Unit 5 The Value of Money Review 单元综合复习(1)-人教版高中英语必修第三册

7 . A study has found that warmer waters off North America's West Coast caused many kinds of sea life to move farther north than ever before.

The study was a project of scientists from the University of California, Davis. The scientists examined waters off the coast of Northern California in the eastern Pacific Ocean. The researchers say they recognized a local of 67 species( 物种)between 2014 and 2016, during what was described as a "marine heat wave". Marine heatwaves were explained in the study as "period of extreme sea surface temperatures lasting for days to months". The 2014-2016 heatwave is thought to be the largest ever recorded. The warn water later moved south toward California.

The warmer water were partly a product of El Niño conditions during the same period, researcher noted. El Niño develops when winds off the coast of South America weaken. This enabled warm water in the western Pacific to move eastward. El Niño often causes ocean temperatures in the area to rise between 2 to 4 degrees Celsius, the study found.

The researchers reported that 37 of the 67 species they studied had never before been observed so far north as California. These creatures are native to an area hundreds of kilometers to the south, mainly around Baja California in Mexico. A few were even found north of California, off the state of Oregon. The northward travel of so many different sea creatures was considered "unprecedented"(史无前例的)by the researchers. Among the species found in the study were a meat-eating sea slug that hunts other sea slugs, a sea snail "butterfly" and purple-lined jellyfish. Another unexpected visitor was the pelagic red crab, which researchers said had only been found in areas off the coast of Mexico.

Scientists involved in the study believe the findings can provide valuable information for knowing future sea life reactions to warming oceans.

1. What is a marine heat wave according to the passage?
A.An ocean with rough surface.
B.A wave with low temperatures.
C.A period of warmer ocean surface water.
D.A species living in extreme weather.
2. What contributes to El Niño conditions?
A.Warmer waters.B.Weakened winds off South America.
C.Colder sea surface.D.Species moving northward.
3. Why does the author mention the men-eat in sea lug in paragraph 4?
A.To point out that ocean environment becomes worse.
B.To suggest that sea creatures need separate living space.
C.To prove that many kinds of sea life can adapt to warmer waters.
D.To evidence that ocean temperature along California are higher than before.
4. What can be inferred from the passage?
A.The heatwaves disturb the life of many sea creatures.
B.The increased temperature benefits many sea creatures.
C.Sea life reactions can be valuable to predict future heatwaves.
D.The heatwaves cause many unexpected visitors to move southward.
书信写作-建议信 | 适中(0.65) |
8 . 现在城市空气污染越来越严重,为解决这个问题,作为校学生会主席,请你用英语写一份倡议书,号召全校师生保护城市空气。内容要点如下:
1. 城市空气污染的危害;
2. 解决该问题的建议;
3. 发出号召
注意:1. 词数:100左右;
2. 可以适当增加细节,以使行文连贯;
3. 开头与结尾已为你写好,但不计入总词数。
Dear teachers and students,
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Thank you!

2019-10-07更新 | 134次组卷 | 1卷引用:四川省雅安市2018-2019学年高一下学期期末(含听力)英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约360词) | 适中(0.65) |
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9 . In the far corner of the front yard of a large house in Florida rests an RV—Recreational Vehicle( 活动房屋式旅游车), shaded by trees as clothing on a nearby line sways(摇动) in the breeze. In this RV, National Geographic explorer Thomas Culhane lives with his wife, Enas, almost entirely off the grid—a lifestyle without depending on electricity supply.

Culhane began living off the grid in the late 1990s, when he went into the basement of his apartment building in Los Angeles and pulled the plug that delivered electricity. Even earlier though, he was first inspired by sustainable(不破坏生态平衡的) living during a trip in 1970 to visit his relatives. He was eight years old and worried that his stay in their small village was going to be miserable because his relatives told him they had no air conditioning or electricity— but they had plenty of fresh fruits from orchards (果园) and lots of cold drinks chilled by the icy stream from the ice caps of the nearby mountain. “This is amazing,”says Culhane.

He met Enas when she was living in an ecovillage in Portugal. Enas said she liked the feeling of being low impact, of being harmless to the earth. Culhane was attracted and fell in love with her. The couple got married, living on the same property(财产) that they currently have. They moved into their first home together—an RV which they immediately took completely off-grid.

Inside their RV, Culhane and Enas have hot showers, a working gas stove, a refrigerator, a washing machine and a big screen TV. They use gas created by their on-site biodigesters (生物煮解器) to cook on a gas-powered stove. They also use energy created by the biodigesters to heat their bath water. They feed the biodigesters using their own food waste— at no additional cost to the earth.

Sometimes on weekends, the RV is turned into a classroom. The couple host workshops to let the community members and students know living an off-grid life is getting easier and teach them how to respect and coexist peacefully with the environment.

1. What does the author intend to do in Paragraph 2?
A.Add some background information.
B.Summarize the previous paragraph.
C.Provide some advice for the readers.
D.Introduce a new topic for discussion.
2. What attracted Culhane most when he first met Enas?
A.Her marriage property.B.Their common life belief.
C.The beauty of her ecovillage.D.Her experience of exploration.
3. What do the biodigesters produce?
A.Food waste.B.Additional costs.
C.Greenhouse gases.D.Alternative(可供选择的) energy
4. What can be a suitable title for the text?
A.An RV Classroom
B.Living off the Grid
C.Getting Close to Nature
D.Protecting the Environment
2019·陕西西安·三模
阅读理解-阅读单选(约330词) | 适中(0.65) |

10 . Some years ago, Michel-Andre found himself staring at the body of a dead whale on a beach in the Canary Islands. It was obvious that the animal had been struck violently by a ship——but why? Only later, after surveying the whales which lived in the area and measuring the increase of sound pollution from ships did it become clear that there was a link.

The whales had become desensitised to the noise of approaching boats and were being struck by them, often seriously. “We never thought that this could be something that could kill,” recalls (回忆) Andre, who is the director of the Laboratory of Applied Bioacoustics at the Technical University of Catalonia, Barcelona.

Andre has spent 20 years developing an advanced system to better understand why incidents like this happen. His underwater microphones have exposed a world of deafening sound and animal communication never observed with such clarity(清晰) before.

It was not an easy task. Sound waves don't travel through water in the uniform, predictable way they do through the air. Instead, the temperature, salinity (盐度) and, flow of water have great effects on their path.

What can be done? One solution is to change shipping routes to courses where ships are statistically less likely to meet animals. It’s also possible to slow ships down to 18km/h or less, which is less likely to seriously injure a whale.

As for dealing with the root cause of the problem, the UN’s International Maritime Organisation has already published guidelines on how to quieten ships, but it will be a while before the effects of such changes might be observed.

“The ocean is not our world,” comments Andre. But it is ours to look after. And thanks to his work, we can better understand the effects of subsea sound pollution.

1. What does the underlined word “desensitised” in Paragraph 2 mean?
A.Stubborn.B.Flexible.C.Dull.D.Friendly.
2. What’s one way to solve the problem according to the text?
A.To lower the speed of ships.
B.To reduce the number of ships.
C.To set up preserves under the sea.
D.To give the injured animals timely treatment.
3. What is the author’s attitude towards what Michel Andre has done?
A.Doubtful.B.Disapproving.C.Positive.D.Uncaring.
4. What is the text mainly about?
A.A great expert.B.Noise in the sea.
C.Animals in the sea.D.Sea exploration technology.
共计 平均难度:一般