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文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍了孟买的噪音非常大,人们开始采取措施减少噪音污染。

1 . In Mumbai, there’s the ceaseless clamor of car homes as drivers edge through traffic. There’s pounding and buzzing from the construction of office towers and apartment blocks. Drumbeats and trumpet melodies spill out from weddings and countless festivals. And it’s all topped off by bellowing (大声吼叫的) street vendors and garbage trucks blasting Bollywood songs. Living in Mumbai requires a huge ______ for noise.

When Sumaira Abdulali began campaigning against noise pollution in India’s financial capital two decades ago, friends, acquaintances and even her lawyers insisted it was ______ . “People told me it’s foolish to even try, because Indians love noise,” she says. “We’re a noisy country.”

But in 2003, Abdulali won a lawsuit seeking to ______ environmental rules that had allowed loud music late into the night during a festival. ______ , the victory led to a ban on loudspeakers within 100 meters of schools, hospitals, courts and places of worship. And she has since won more than a dozen other actions both on her own and via the Awaaz Foundation (awaaz means “noise” in Hindi), which she launched in 2006.

The World Health Organization warns that noise is a top threat to human ______ , affecting not only hearing but also sleep, brain development and cardiovascular health. Abdulali claims Mumbai is the world’s ______ city. A study led by Ritesh Vijay, an expert from India’s National Environmental Engineering Research Institute, did find that noise levels in Mumbai and surrounding areas in 2020 dramatically exceed legal limits.

In recent years, the battle against noise has become increasingly ______ , with Abdulali often facing powerful interests who consider it an inevitable byproduct of growth. With increasing ______ , ever more people are exposed to continuous noise. In a rapidly expanding city such as Mumbai, with a population topping 12 million, demand for housing puts noise rules ______ development plans. Although sound barriers are required for construction projects, they’re expensive, so developers ______ installing them.

Traffic is a tougher problem. Noise on the road can reach 110 decibels (分贝) — a level that can lead to permanent hearing damage after just 15 minutes of exposure, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Luckily, ______ can help in the fight, Vijay says. He suggests devices that measure horn use, which would let officials offer ______ drivers rewards like deductions (扣除) on car insurance. Dynamic signaling, where sensors linked to stoplights detect traffic density, would improve vehicle flow and ______   the urge to resort to horns, he says. Local government also ______ . Mumbai decreed (颁布) India’s first “No-Honking” day in 2008, with police handing out booklets to raise awareness about traffic noise and imposing fines up to 1,000 rupees ($12) on offending motorists.

Far more important is the longer-term impact of the day-to-day noise, so that’s where Vijay believes activists should focus their energy. “In India we celebrate festivals with lots of noise,” he says. “But our ______ noise itself is beyond the allowed limit.”

1.
A.talentB.potentialC.demandD.tolerance
2.
A.encouragingB.reasonableC.ridiculousD.depressing
3.
A.take advantage ofB.put an end toC.lay emphasis onD.throw light on
4.
A.ThereforeB.SimilarlyC.SubsequentlyD.However
5.
A.well-beingB.intelligenceC.interactionD.behavior
6.
A.largestB.busiestC.loudestD.richest
7.
A.difficultB.successfulC.diverseD.easy
8.
A.availabilityB.capitalizationC.urbanizationD.convenience
9.
A.in pace withB.in contact withC.in league withD.in conflict with
10.
A.recommendB.justifyC.resistD.advocate
11.
A.governmentB.technologyC.financeD.psychology
12.
A.quietB.braveC.safeD.alert
13.
A.triggerB.satisfyC.reduceD.maintain
14.
A.steps inB.takes overC.cuts inD.takes off
15.
A.trafficB.constructionC.ceremonyD.background
2023-11-27更新 | 190次组卷 | 1卷引用:上海市建平中学2023-2024学年高三上学期期中英语试卷
22-23高三上·江苏南通·阶段练习
阅读理解-阅读单选(约380词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。文章介绍了茶包中含有的微小的塑料颗粒可能对环境带来污染,作者举例了一些公司目前的应对策略,并呼吁读者减少茶包的使用。

2 . Are you a tea drinker? If so, you’re not alone. Every day around the world millions of cups of this popular brew are drunk, and it’s been that way for thousands of years. The oldest discovered tea is from the Han Dynasty, dating from 206BC to 220AD. But it’s thought that the tea trend really took off during the Tang Dynasty in the 8th Century, when it became China’s national drink. Now, Turkey, the Republic of Ireland and the UK are believed to be the biggest tea—drinking nations, per capita.

Tea is consumed in many ways-slurped, sipped or glugged. It can be poured from pots, infused or brewed in the cup using tea bags—and it’s this latter process that is causing concern. Research last year found some premium tea bags might be leaving billions of microscopic plastic particles in the cup. Scientists from McGill University in Montreal found that some ‘plastic’ tea bags shed high levels of micro plastics into water. However, The World Health Organization says such particles in drinking water do not appear to pose a risk.

Most tea bags are made from paper, with a small amount of plastic used to seal them shut— made from oil. This has led to debate about whether they can be recycled, but many are still composted. However, gardener Mike Armitage has told the BBC that the plastic contained in the soil could be washed into streams and rivers and ultimately out to sea.

Unilever, the owners of the tea brand PG Tips, said their tea bags are made with a small amount of plastic—used to seal them—and that they are suitable for composting. And the brand Yorkshire Tea said their bags do contain 25% polypropylene, but they were “actively developing plant—based and biodegradable alternatives”.

While tea bag manufacturers might be doing their bit to reduce plastic pollution, it could be a good time to switch your favourite beverage to coffee, or if that isn’t your cup of tea then try using loose-leaf tea, which can have a better flavour.

1. What is the main idea of paragraph 2?
A.Tea can be consumed in many ways.
B.The use of tea bags doesn’t appear to pose a risk
C.The use of tea bags is causing concern.
D.Some tea bags might be leaving microscopic plastic particles in the cup.
2. What is not a possible solution to the problem caused by tea bags?
A.reduce the amount of plastic used to seal tea bags
B.wash the plastic in the soil into streams, rivers and sea
C.develop plant-based and biodegradable alternatives
D.switch to coffee or try to use loose-leaf tea
3. What is the author’s attitude towards the use of tea bags?
A.SupportiveB.IndifferentC.OpposedD.Neutral
4. What could be the best title for the text?
A.Potential Plastic Pollution
B.Chinese tea culture
C.What is your favorite drink?
D.The Humble tea bag
2022-10-18更新 | 427次组卷 | 5卷引用:江苏省如皋市2022-2023学年高三上学期第一次联考英语试题
语法填空-短文语填(约150词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文为一篇说明文。是一篇新闻报道。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。
3 . 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。

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

The    4    (decide) 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 both at home and abroad. Such an    6    (responsilble)act not only directly harms the interests of the people in Japan’s neighbouring countries, but    7    threatens the global marine environment and international public health security,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said.

Greenpeace(绿色和平组织)criticized Japan’s plan and said there are other solutions that should    8    (censider). “    9    than using the best available technology to store and process the water    10    the long term, they have chosen the cheapest solution, damping the water into the Pactfie Ocean.”

2023高三·全国·专题练习
听力选择题-短对话 | 较易(0.85) |
4 . What does the woman mean?
A.The sea is getting smaller.
B.The sea is being polluted.
C.The sea is getting cleaner.
2023-04-22更新 | 203次组卷 | 2卷引用:高考英语听力主题训练(十六)环境
阅读理解-阅读单选(约320词) | 较易(0.85) |
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5 . We all have an idea about the common types of environmental problems. However, light pollution may be a new term to many of us. But, the fact is, it does affect mankind, other living forms and the environment as a whole.

What is light pollution? It presents all forms of misused man-made light. The obvious cause of light pollution is the use of outdoor lighting products improperly. It can be office lighting, car headlights, station lights, streetlights and many more.

Light pollution is harmful to both animals and plants. Upon studies, it is found that obvious effects are observed in the behaviour of nocturnal animals. Needless to mention, bright light at night makes it difficult for these animals to hunt, wander and perform their regular activities. Light pollution is directly or indirectly responsible for causing several diseases. Its effects are related to disturbance in the physical rhythm. It contributes to risks of developing cancerous cells. So, it’s nothing less than a threat to human health.

You have already seen the negative effects of light pollution on animals and human health. Apart from this, the actual cost of misused light is about millions of dollars every year. It also leads to the release of greenhouse gases and global warming. After all, fuels are used for producing electricity.

While outdoor lighting and using man-made lighting products are part of our modern lifestyle, some simple ways will surely help in reducing light pollution. For example, while installing outdoor lighting, make sure that they are pointed downwards. Also, use only the required lighting equipment for both home and offices. Believe it or not, many people living in the urban areas cannot view clear sky and stars at night. Let’s contribute our part in reducing the pollution.

1. What can we learn about light pollution?
A.It has no effect on plants.
B.It contributes to most cancers.
C.It is a negative fruit of light technology.
D.It affects animals’ normal activities in the daytime.
2. How does light pollution affect the climate?
A.It reduces temperatures by days and makes nights warmer.
B.It creates more clouds over parts of the Earth.
C.It stops the release of greenhouse gases.
D.It causes global temperatures to go up.
3. How can we contribute our part in reducing light pollution?
A.Forbidding the use of outdoor lighting.
B.Using clean energy to produce electricity.
C.Not using unnecessary lights at home and offices.
D.Reducing money spent on man-made light in urban areas.
4. It can be inferred from the last paragraph that _______.
A.citizens should be forbidden to install outdoor lighting
B.only simple ways can help reduce light pollution
C.there is no clear sky or stars over the urban areas
D.light pollution needs to be dealt with urgently
阅读理解-阅读单选(约330词) | 适中(0.65) |
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6 . The World Health Organization warns that millions of people are dying every year from indoor air pollution. Nearly three billion people are unable to use clean fuels and technologies for cooking, heating as well as lighting.

These findings show that the use of deadly fuels in inefficient stoves, space heaters or lights is to blame for many of these deaths.

WHO officials say indoor pollution leads to early deaths from stroke, heart and lung disease, childhood pneumonia and lung cancer. Women and girls are the main victims. These diseases can often result from the burning of solid fuels. These fuels include wood, coal, animal waste, crop waste and charcoal.

The United Nations found that more than 95 percent of households in sub-Saharan Africa depend on solid fuels for cooking. It says huge populations in India, China and Latin American countries, such as Guatermala and Peru,are also at risk.

Nigel Brace is a professor of Public Health at the University of Liverpool. He says researchers are developing good cook-stoves and other equipment to burn fuels in a more efficient way.There are already multiple technologies available for use in clean fuels.There is really quite an effective and reasonably low-cost alcohol stove made by Dometic (a Sweden-based company) that is now being tested out. LPG (Liquefield Petroleum Gas) cook is obviously widely available and efforts are under way to make those efficient. Another interesting development is electric induction stoves. WHO experts note that some new, safe and low-cost technologies that could help are already available. In India, you can buy an induction stove for about $8.00. And in Africa you can buy a solar lamp for less than $1.00.

But this,the agency says, is just a start. It is urging developing countries to use cleaner fuels and increase access to cleaner and more modern cooking and heating appliances/devices.

1. What does the indoor pollution mainly result from?
A.Poisonous fuels.B.High technology.C.Space heaters.D.Solar energy.
2. How is Paragraph 3 mainly developed?
A.By showing differences.B.By describing a process.
C.By making a list.D.By analyzing data.
3. What can we infer from the passage?
A.Indoor pollution results in some deaths.
B.Most of the deaths are in developing countries.
C.The solid fuels are used in more effective ways.
D.There is no indoor pollution in developed countries.
4. Which of the following is TRUE according to the passage?
A.LPG cooks are being tested out.B.Alcohol stoves are widely used now.
C.Electric induction stoves are expensive.D.Solar lamps are very cheap in Africa.

7 . Hardware in general, and smartphones in particular, have become a huge environmental and health problem in the Global South’s landfill sites(垃圾填埋场).

Electronic waste (e-waste) currently takes up 5 percent of all global waste, and it is set to increase rapidly as more of us own more than one smartphone, laptop and power bank. They end up in places like Agbogbloshie on the outskirts of Ghana’s capital, Accra. It is the biggest e-waste dump in the world, where 10,000 informal workers walk through tons of abandoned goods as part of an informal recycling process. They risk their health searching for the precious metals that are found in abandoned smartphones.

But Agbogbloshie legally should not exist. The Basel Convention, a 1989 treaty, aims to prevent developed nations from unauthorized dumping of e-waste in less developed countries. The e-waste industry, however, circumvents regulation by exporting e-waste labelled as “secondhand goods” to poor countries like Ghana, knowing full well that it is heading for a landfill site.

A recent report found Agbogbloshie contained some of the most dangerous chemicals. This is not surprising: smart phones contain chemicals like mercury(水银), lead and even arsenic(砷). Reportedly, one egg from a free-range chicken in Agbogbloshie contained a certain chemical which can cause cancer and damage the immune system at a level that’s about 220 times greater than a limit set by the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA). Most worryingly, these poisonous chemicals are free to pollute the broader soil and water system. This should concern us all, since some of Ghana’s top exports are cocoa and nuts.

Some governments have started to take responsibility for their consumers’ waste. For example, Germany has started a project that includes a sustainable recycling system at Agbogbloshie, along with a health clinic for workers. However, governments cannot solve the problem alone, as there is an almost limitless consumer demand for hardware, especially when governments’ green policies are focused on issues like climate change.

Only the manufacturers can fix this. A more economically sustainable and politically possible solution is through encouraging hardware manufacturers to make the repair, reuse and recycling of hardware profitable, or at least cost-neutral.

1. What can we infer from Paragraph 2?
A.Electronic waste requires more landfill sites.
B.Electronic waste is too complex to get fully recycled.
C.Electronic products need to be improved immediately.
D.Electronic pollution is a burning question in Agbogbloshie.
2. What does the underlined word “circumvents” in Paragraph 3 mean?
A.Relaxes.B.Abolishes.C.Avoids.D.Tightens.
3. What should be the biggest concern according to the text?
A.The violation of EFSA’s standards.B.The threat of polluted food worldwide.
C.The lack of diversity in Ghana’s exports.D.The damage to chicken’s immune system.
4. What does the author think is the best solution to the e-waste problem?
A.Letting governments take on the main responsibility.
B.Reducing customers’ demands for electronic products.
C.Governments adjusting their green policies about e-waste.
D.Manufacturers’ developing a sustainable hardware economy.
阅读理解-阅读单选(约370词) | 较难(0.4) |
文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍微塑料颗粒进入大气层开始“移动”,这种“移动”会对生态系统造成破坏。

8 . According to US national park researchers, microplastic particles (微粒) equal to as many as 300 million plastic water bottles are raining down on the Grand Canyon.

In a survey of 11 remote western places, also including the Great Basin and Craters of the Moon national parks, researchers discovered more than 1000 tons of microplastic particles that had traveled through the atmosphere via rain or water particles.

Most microplastics are from larger pieces of plastic. Since plastics don’t degrade (降解), plastics that end up in waste piles or landfills break down into microparticles and make their way through the Earth’s atmosphere, soil and water systemics.

Janice Brahney, lead researcher at Utah State University, said, “Plastics could be deposited (沉降), readmitted to the atmosphere again, transported for some time…who knows how many times, and who knows how far they’ve traveled?”

Brahney’s team found that so-called wet microplastics, named for the way they are transported, are most likely disturbed by a storm and swept up into the atmosphere, having originated in larger urban areas. By comparison, the spreading patterns of dry microplastics is the same as dust and can travel long distances, often across continents.

Brahney warned that new findings show an urgent need to reduce plastic pollution. Although their full effects on the human body are still unknown, scientists are starting to raise public health concerns over microplastic particles: They’re small enough to stay in lung tissue, causing damage and, in some cases of routine exposure, can lead to asthma and cancer.

Scientists have also found that microplastic particles affect the temperature adjustment function of the soil, leading to losses in plant life.

Brahney believes that her research is just the beginning of understanding how microplastics move through ecosystems.

“Learning about plastics and how they don’t degrade seems like, ‘Oh my God, we should have been expecting this: they’ re just made into these tiny sizes, they could certainly be carried by the wind,” Brahney said.

“We’ve just been missing it,” she added.

1. The direct cause of the microplastic rain is that_________.
A.small pieces from plastics become degradable
B.microplastic particles travel into the atmosphere
C.plastic particles end up in waste piles or landfills
D.plastic water bottles are transported to the water systems
2. What did Janice Brahney and her team find out?
A.The structure of microplastic particles.
B.The distance that microplastics can travel.
C.The way that microplastics are transported.
D.The different types of microplastic particles.
3. What does the author mainly want to tell us with the text?
A.Microplastics have affected the ecosystem.
B.Plastic particles have serious effects on human health.
C.Methods to degrade plastics could be developed soon.
D.Researchers have missed the best time to study plastics.
4. What’s the attitude of Brahney towards the microplastic move according to the last two paragraphs?
A.Favorable.B.Uncaring.
C.Doubtful.D.Worried.
2023-04-23更新 | 195次组卷 | 1卷引用:2023届四川省攀枝花市高三下学期第三次统一考试英语试题
语法填空-短文语填(约400词) | 较难(0.4) |
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍了旅游业对地球环境的影响。
9 . Directions: After reading the passage below, fill in the blanks to make the passage coherent and grammatically correct. For the blanks with a given word, fill in each blank with the proper form of the given word; for the other blanks, use one word that best fits each blank.

The Real Cost of Travel

Mass tourism is a relatively recent phenomenon. The tourism industry     1     (take) off in the middle of the last century and it’s been growing ever since. In the last ten years especially, more and more people have been traveling to places     2     we had previously only read about or seen on television. But what kind of impact does tourism have on the planet?

A voyage to the end of the earth?

A large cruise ship (邮轮) can carry as many as 6,000 passengers and there are upwards of 50 such ships currently     3    (sail) the seas. Cruise ships dump about 90,000 tons of waste into the oceans every year. Any harmful effects of this are made even worse by the fact     4     cruises tend to visit the same places over and over again, thus concentrating the waste in specific places.

Trash on top of the world

From remote ocean habitats to the world’s highest mountain, our trash is everywhere. Though far fewer people go climbing the Himalayas than on a cruise, their impact     5    (still feel). Tourism is vital to the economy of Nepal,     6     it is to many non-industrial countries. But for decades, climbers have been abandoning their unwanted equipment on Everest. For the last few years, clean-up teams of local and international climbers have been organizing hiking trips just     7    (pick) up the waste. One group has brought over eight tons of waste down from the mountain!

When more is not better

Tourism of a different kind is causing problems in Europe. Construction on the Mediterranean coast has been     8     control for years. Beach resorts form an almost unbroken line from Gibraltar to Greece, and natural habitats have disappeared under miles of concrete. And so we pollute the sea, the land, and the air. Low-cost air travel is booming, in spite of (or perhaps     9     (help) by) economic problems. For many Europeans, low-cost flights allow them to take several short vacations a year. Yet curiously, short flights actually have a much bigger effect on climate change than long flights. So, are there    10     (damaging) ways of seeing the world? Traveling by train, for example, is a much greener way of getting around.

2023-05-08更新 | 193次组卷 | 1卷引用:上海市行知中学2022-2023学年高二下学期期中英语试卷
语法填空-短文语填(约50词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:本文是一篇说明文,主要讲的是遍布加勒比海的柱状珊瑚现在濒临灭绝。
10 . 阅读下列短文,根据短文内容填空。在未给提示词的空白处仅填写1个恰当的单词,在给出提示词的空白处用括号内所给词的正确形式填空。

Pillar coral (柱状珊瑚),     1     (find) throughout the Caribbean, is critically endangered now. Its population


    2     (decline) by more than 80 percent since 1990.     3    (rise) ocean temperatures and pollution make corals more easily get certain deadly diseases. And the pillar coral is really just the tip of the iceberg     4     it comes to the difficulty of corals.
2023-04-14更新 | 192次组卷 | 1卷引用:2023届北京市顺义区高三下学期第二次英语统练题
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