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1 . Sometimes it’s hard to let go. For many British people, that can apply to institutions and objects that represent their country’s past-age-old castles, splendid homes… and red phone boxes.

Beaten first by the march of technology and lately by the terrible weather in junkyards (废品场), the phone boxes representative of an age are now making something of a comeback. Adapted in imaginative ways, many have reappeared on city streets and village greens housing tiny cafes, cellphone repair shops or even defibrillator machines (除颤器).

The original iron boxes with the round roofs first appeared in 1926. They were designed by Giles Gilbert Scott, the architect of the Battersea Power Station in London. After becoming an important part of many British streets, the phone boxes began disappearing in the 1980s, with the rise of the mobile phone sending most of them away to the junkyards.

About that time, Tony Inglis’ engineering and transport company got the job to remove phone boxes from the streets and sell them out. But Inglis ended up buying hundreds of them himself, with the idea of repairing and selling them. He said that he had heard the calls to preserve the boxes and had seen how some of them were listed as historic buildings.

As Inglis and, later other businessmen, got to work, repurposed phone boxes began reappearing in cities and villages as people found new uses for them. Today, they are once again a familiar sight, playing roles that are often just as important for the community as their original purpose.

In rural areas, where ambulances can take a relatively long time to arrive, the phone boxes have taken on a lifesaving role. Local organizations can adopt them for l pound, and install defibrillators to help in emergencies.

Others also looked at the phone boxes and saw business opportunities. LoveFone, a company that advocates repairing cellphones rather than abandoning them, opened a mini workshop in a London phone box in 2016.

The tiny shops made economic sense, according to Robert Kerr, a founder of LoveFone. He said that one of the boxes generated around $13,500 in revenue a month and cost only about $400 to rent.

Inglis said phone boxes called to mind an age when things were built to last. “I like what they are to people, and I enjoy bringing things back,” he said.

1. The phone boxes are making a comeback ______.
A.to form a beautiful sight of the city
B.to improve telecommunications services
C.to remind people of a historical period
D.to meet the requirement of green economy
2. Why did the phone boxes begin to go out of service in the 1980s?
A.They were not well-designed.B.They provided bad services.
C.They had too short a history.D.They lost to new technologies.
3. The phone boxes are becoming popular mainly because of ______.
A.their new appearance and lower pricesB.the push of the local organizations
C.their changed roles and functionsD.the big funding of the businessmen
2020-07-12更新 | 2965次组卷 | 6卷引用:2020年江苏省高考英语试卷
阅读理解-阅读单选(约420词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍了1996年爱尔兰共和军恐怖组织在曼彻斯特投下了一枚炸弹,这次事件实际上给曼彻斯特提供了一个重新发展的机会。

2 . On 15th June 1996, a huge bomb in Manchester, in the north-west of England, destroyed the city centre, causing nearly a billion pounds’ worth of damage. The bomb, which had been planted by a terrorist group called the IRA, injured over 200 people but remarkably killed no one as police had evacuated the area following a warning from the IRA.

Manchester had already undergone some changes as it recovered from the economic depression of the early 1990s that had destroyed much of its industry and created large-scale unemployment. It had won the right to host the Commonwealth Games (a large sporting event) and redeveloped some deserted areas through the building of the National Velodrome, an exhibition centre and an award-winning concert hall. However, at the time of the bombing, the city centre was still badly neglected — dominated by the Arndale Shopping Centre (once described as looking like an enormous public toilet) and squares that were run-down and affected by drug addiction. So, dreadful though the bombing was, it actually provided an opportunity to start again that might not have happened otherwise.

Within weeks of the explosion, the government had set up a public-private company to manage the recovery and launched an international competition to design the redevelopment. The winning plan involved restoring the historic buildings that had been damaged, tearing down and rebuilding some of the ugly buildings, creating new public spaces and improving life for pedestrians. Alongside this, the government reduced traffic in the centre by changing the direction of some main roads and developed an integrated public transport system, making access to the centre easier. Since these improvements, the city has attempted to boost tourism by using some of the city’s historical sites for major public events and by creating the Urbis building, which now houses the National Museum of Football. In turn, these changes have been key in attracting new investors, such as the Qatari royal family who own Manchester City Football Club.

Since 1996, the Manchester economy has grown in all areas. However, there are some concerns that inequality has also increased. Nor are all the new spaces appreciated. One new garden square designed by an international architect was rated as the worst attraction in the city. Others argue that in changing market stalls and industry for luxury consumption and glass buildings, the city has lost some of its soul.

1. What does the word “evacuate” (paragraph 1)most probably mean?
A.Looking for something in a place.B.Estimate the losses in a ruined place.
C.Remove people from a place of danger.D.Determine a numerical value of a place.
2. What does the writer say about the 1996 IRA bombing?
A.It presented an unexpected opportunity for Manchester.
B.It destroyed the city centre that used to be busy and crowded.
C.It resulted in a lot of people getting hurt or killed in Manchester.
D.It cost Manchester its chance to host the Commonwealth Games.
3. What did Manchester do for its recovery?
A.It set up Manchester City Football Club.
B.It organised an international competition to attract new investors.
C.It tore down some historical sites to make room for public events.
D.It developed a public traffic system to make the city center more accessible.
4. What is the passage mainly about?
A.Damage Manchester suffered due to the IRA bombing.
B.The IRA bombing in Manchester and its consequences.
C.Challenges related to the redevelopment of Manchester.
D.The long-term effects of the changes made in Manchester.
2023-11-29更新 | 210次组卷 | 1卷引用:上海市复旦大学附属中学2023-2024学年高三上学期期中考试英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约210词) | 容易(0.94) |
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文章大意:这是一篇记叙文。文章主要讲述了发生在1666年伦敦的一次大火灾。介绍了它的起因,火势的扩大,造成的伤亡以及最后的结局。

3 . A huge fire broke out on 2 September 1666 in London. The fire, known as the Great Fire of London, was the worst fire in the history of London. It burned down more than three quarters of the old city.

The fire started in the very early hours of Sunday morning in the house of the king’s baker. A strong wind blew the fire from the baker’s house into a small hotel next door. Then it spread quickly into Thames Street. That was the beginning.

At that time, most of the buildings in London were made of wood, so it was easy for the fire to spread quickly. By eight o’clock, three hundred houses were on fire. By Monday, nearly a kilometre of the city was burning along the Thames River. On Tuesday, which was considered the worst day, the fire destroyed many well-known buildings, including the old St Paul’s Cathedral.

The fire burned until finally hundreds of buildings in the path of the fire were destroyed to create a firebreak. The fire then died out eventually with nothing left to burn.

1. Why is the fire of 1666 called the Great Fire of London?
A.The fire broke out in the capital of England.
B.The fire was the worst fire in the history of London.
C.People in England will never forget the fire.
D.The fire spread fast into Thames Street.
2. Where did the fire break out?
A.In the house of the king’s baker.
B.In Thames Street.
C.In the house of the baker’s neighbour.
D.In St Paul’s Cathedral.
3. Why did the fire spread quickly?
A.It started in a baker’s house.
B.It broke out on a Sunday morning.
C.A hotel was next to the baker’s house.
D.Most of the buildings in London were wooden.
4. What was destroyed in the fire?
A.The old St Paul’s Cathedral.
B.Hundreds of buildings in the path of the fire.
C.Hundreds of wooden houses.
D.All of the above.
文章大意:这是一篇记叙文。主要讲述了达·芬奇的名画《蒙娜丽莎》真实历史就像她的微笑一样神秘,文章给读者揭开了它的历史归属轨迹。

4 . Mona Lisa, the famous picture _________ by Leonardo Da Vinci in 1505, is getting _________ by the year. Visitors have noticed _________ but repairing the world’s most famous painting is not easy. Nearly 6 million people go to _________ the Mona Lisa every year, many attracted by the mystery of her smile. ”It is very interesting that when you’re not looking at her, she seems to be _________, and then you look at her and she _________," said Professor Livingstone.

_________, the actual history of the Mona Lisa is just as mysterious as the smile.

Da Vinci himself loved it so much that he always _________ it with him, until it was_________ sold to France’s King Francis I in 1519. In 1911, the painting was __________ from the Louvre by a former employee, who took it out of the __________ hidden under his coat. He said he planned to __________ it to Italy. The painting was sent back to__________ two years later. During World WarII, the French __________ the painting in small towns to keep it out of the__________ of German forces.

1.
A.writtenB.praisedC.boughtD.painted
2.
A.lessB.moreC.worseD.better
3.
A.changesB.expressionsC.kissesD.gloves
4.
A.seeB.visitC.greetD.examine
5.
A.laughingB.smilingC.cryingD.shouting
6.
A.saysB.sitsC.standsD.stops
7.
A.ThereforeB.OtherwiseC.HoweverD.Instead
8.
A.carriedB.hidC.keptD.buried
9.
A.actuallyB.finallyC.reallyD.hopefully
10.
A.takenB.destroyedC.brokenD.stolen
11.
A.schoolB.museumC.houseD.factory
12.
A.giveB.sendC.takeD.return
13.
A.FranceB.GermanyC.ItalyD.England
14.
A.keptB.hidC.putD.grew
15.
A.feetB.clothesC.handsD.hats
2023-02-17更新 | 158次组卷 | 3卷引用:陕西省宝鸡市金台区2022-2023学年高一上学期期末考试英语试题
智能选题,一键自动生成优质试卷~
语法填空-短文语填(约500词) | 较难(0.4) |
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5 . Directions: Read the following two passages. Fill in the blanks to make the passage coherent. For the blanks with a given word, fill in each blank with the proper from of the given word. For the other blanks, fill in each blank with one proper word. Make sure that your answers are grammatically correct.

American Mikah Meyer has an unusual goal. He wants to visit all of the more than 400 properties operated by the National Park Service.

He spent January 2017 visiting historic areas in the southeastern United States.

One of his first stops was Fort Sumter,     1     former military position in waters just off the coast of Charleston, South Carolina. Fort Sumter is famous for being the place where the first shot of the Civil War     2    (fire). It is also     3     the first person killed in the conflict died.

After years of rising tensions between Northern and Southern states, the two sides clashed in Charleston Harbor on April 12, 1861. That was when the Southern army launched an artillery attack on Fort Sumter. Federal troops surrendered the fort a short time later. Union forces eventually fought     4    (regain) control of the base, and defeated the South in 1865. A lone cannon symbolizes the fierce battle that took place on April 12, 1861, when Confederate artillery opened fire on this federal fort in Charleston Harbor, South Carolina, marking it     5     the day when the Civil War began.

As he stood inside the large walls of Fort Sumter National Monument, Mikah Meyer looked across the water to the port at Charleston. He imagined what the area must have looked like more than a century and half ago. “You’ll see across that bridge, Charleston, South Carolina. It was under siege at one point for 17 months. There were cannons that     6     fire from where I'm standing on the fort all the way to the old town...” Meyer also visited the Charles Pinckney National Historic Site in South Carolina. There he had a chance to learn about Charles Pinckney, who helped write — and was a signer of — the U.S. Constitution. Charles Pinckney was 29 years old when he helped draft the United States Constitution,     7     he signed as a representative of South Carolina. He dedicated his considerable political and legal talents to     8    (establish) a strong national government. “Some people call him our forgotten founding father, but he was a political figure of early America who helped shape     9     our eventual constitution ended up looking like...” The National Park Service helps care for what remains of Pinckney’s former home and farm. Park service workers tell the stories of 18th-century plantation life for free and enslaved people.

During his travels in January, Meyer had a surprise. Barack Obama, in his last few days as president, named a new national park site in Beaufort, just south of Charleston. It is called the Reconstruction Era National Monument. The Reconstruction Era National Monument will help tell the story of post-Civil war America.

The Reconstruction Era     10    (stretch) from 1861 to 1898. It was a period when Americans struggled with the treatment of newly freed African Americans. The new national monument will help tell that story.

2020-11-12更新 | 601次组卷 | 6卷引用:上海市七宝中学2020-2021学年高三上学期期中英语试题
语法填空-短文语填(约210词) | 适中(0.65) |
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6 . 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。

The Oscars are held every March in the city of Los Angeles. Many of Hollywood’s biggest     1     (celebrity) attend this event,    2     (hope) to win an Oscar award. Since the first ceremony in 1929,    3     only fifteen awards were given out, the Oscars have grown in size and popularity. Now, more than fifty of the gold-plated statues are made every year in the city of Chicago. They then     4     (transport) to Los Angeles for the awards show.

However, on March 8, 2000, someone stole the fifty-five Oscar statues that were made for that year’s ceremony. Soon after, the trucking company     5     (responsibility) for transporting the statues offered a $50,000 reward for them.

A few days later, Willie Fulgear was looking for some boxes in a garbage can near his home in the Koreatown district of Los Angeles. Willie was moving out of his apartment and he needed boxes     6     (pack) his things in. Searching through the can, he found some white boxes. He opened one of them and found an Oscar inside. He had the other boxes     7     (tear) open and got fifty-two Oscars, all     8     perfect condition. He immediately called the police.

Finally Willie Fulgear received     9     $50,000 reward and an invitation to the Oscar ceremony. He didn’t receive an award for his honesty     10     he did go from litter to glitter (闪光) in just one week.

完形填空(约310词) | 较难(0.4) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇记叙文,主要讲的是历史上刺杀希特勒未遂的一些行动。

7 . Recently-leaked historical documents revealed that there were dozens of attempts by German Resistance almost killing Hitler.

If the Munich agreements of Sept. 29, 1938 had not given Hitler the fruits of war with Czechoslovakia without war, some generals might have ________: Secret arrangements had been made to open from within the doors to Hitler’s house so that a military ________ could rush in. If on Nov. 8, 1939, Hitler had not cut short a speech ________ for two hours in Munich, an assassination plan there might have succeeded. Two days later, with ________ thickened around Hitler, an officers’ bomb attempt was abandoned. In a March 13, 1943 attempt, explosives hidden in two bottles of red wine were placed ________ Hitlers’ plane. The fuse (引信) worked, and the firing pins (撩针) struck. Still, the ________ did not explode, perhaps because the explosive, carried in the plane’s cargo hold, was sensitive to cold.

Eight days later, as Hitler entered a military exhibition, an officer ________ a fuse on a bomb beneath his coat and stayed close to Hitler. But after just two minutes in the exhibition, Hitler, with a wild animal’s ________for danger, left through a side door. The officer dashed to a restroom to defuse the bomb.

A 24-year-old captain shocked by Nazi’s cruelty, instantly ________ when the German Resistance asked if he would kill Hitler. In November 1943, with Hitler scheduled to view a display of new uniform, the captain, with a bomb concealed ________ his person, was prepared to light a short fuse and ________ upon Hitler. But the display was ________ when the railroad car containing the uniforms was destroyed by air raid (空袭) on Berlin.

If it had not been unusually hot on July 20, 1944, Hitler’s conference with Stauffenberg and others would have been held in a concrete basement, which would have ________ the explosion of Stauffenberg’s bomb. ________, they met, in an above-ground wooden building, where the force was weakened. Hitler ________ and the planned attempt was discovered in a few hours.

1.
A.resignedB.rejectedC.rebelledD.retired
2.
A.forceB.strengthC.powerD.energy
3.
A.preparedB.assignedC.suggestedD.scheduled
4.
A.regulationB.securityC.managementD.atmosphere
5.
A.aboardB.aroundC.alongD.across
6.
A.planeB.fuseC.bombD.cargo
7.
A.setB.openedC.pulledD.lit
8.
A.natureB.instinctC.characterD.intelligence
9.
A.agreedB.decidedC.declinedD.admitted
10.
A.inB.byC.atD.on
11.
A.leapB.lookC.callD.lean
12.
A.postponedB.canceledC.extendedD.delayed
13.
A.preventedB.strengthenedC.reservedD.improved
14.
A.MeanwhileB.StillC.InsteadD.Furthermore
15.
A.diedB.remainedC.departedD.survived
2022-01-20更新 | 160次组卷 | 1卷引用:上海交通大学附属中学2019-2020学年高一上学期期末考试英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约290词) | 较难(0.4) |
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8 . America’s first transcontinental railroad, completed 150 years ago today at Promontory Summit in Utah, connected the vast United States and brought America into the modern age. Chinese immigrants contributed greatly to this notable achievement, but the historical accounts that followed often ignored their role.

Between 1863 and 1869, as many as 20,000 Chinese workers helped build the dangerous western part of the railroad, a winding ribbon of track known as the Central Pacific. At first, the Central Pacific Railroad’s directors wanted a whites-only workforce. When not enough white men signed up, the railroad began hiring Chinese men for the backbreaking labor. Company leaders were skeptical of the new recruits’ ability to do the work, but they proved themselves not only capable but even superior to the other workers.

Chinese workers cut through dense forests, filled deep narrow steep-sided valley, constructed long trestles(高架桥) and built enormous retaining walls(防护墙) -- some of which remain complete and undamaged today. All work was done by hand using carts, shovels and picks but no machinery. However, progress came at great cost: an estimated 1,200 Chinese laborers died along the Central Pacific route.

Despite these facts, Chinese workers were often left out of the official story because of their identity of foreigners. On the transcontinental railroad's 100th birthday, the Chinese workers were still not honored. It was another fifty years later that their role was gradually highlighted. To celebrate the railroad’s 150th anniversary in 2019, the California assembly passed a resolution in 2017 to recognize and honor the Chinese railroad workers by designating May 10, 2017, and every May 10 thereafter, as California Chinese Railroad Workers Memorial Day.

1. What might be the best title for the text?
A.The Birth of the Central Pacific Cost Dearly
B.May 10--A Special Day for Chinese Immigrants
C.Chinese Workers’ Contributions Gained Recognition
D.The 150th anniversary of the Central Pacific Railroad
2. What does “they” in Paragraph 2 refer to?
A.Chinese laborers.B.White workers.
C.Company leaders.D.Railroad directors.
3. Why does the author make such detailed descriptions in Paragraph 3?
A.To prove Chinese workers’ superior skills.
B.To stress the danger and difficulty of the work.
C.To describe the grand scenery along the railroad.
D.To show notable achievements made by Chinese workers.
4. What does the text intend to tell us?
A.None so blind as those who won’t see.B.No pains, no gains.
C.Truth will come to light sooner or later.D.Doing is better than saying.
2020-05-07更新 | 567次组卷 | 7卷引用:2020届山东省威海市文登区高三下学期一轮总复习英语试题
语法填空-短文语填(约380词) | 困难(0.15) |

9 . The Battle of Chancellorsville, one of the most famous battles of the Civil War, took place in Virginia in the spring of 1863. For months, the two armies had been staying on opposite banks of a narrow river. The Confederate(南方联盟) troops were led by perhaps     1     (honored) military tactician(战略家) in American history, General Robert E. Lee. The Union (北方联盟)soldiers were led by “Fighting” Joe Hooker.

In appearance, personality, and lifestyle, these men were nearly perfect opposites. Lee, an older man in poor health with a gray beard, had a solemn, measured character. Hooker was a blond, broad-shouldered young man     2     pride over his appearance was but one aspect of his self-centeredness. Whereas Lee was loyal and principled, Hooker was known for his rollicking enjoyment of both women and whiskey.

Despite the fact that the Confederacy     3     (win) the last four major battles and the Union soldiers were starving,     4     (exhaust), and demoralized, Hooker proclaimed, “My plans are perfect. And when I start to carry them out,     5     God have mercy on Bobby Lee, for I shall have none.” Why was Hooker so confident?

Hooker had used spies, analysts, and even hot air balloons to compile a vast amount of intelligence about Lee’s army. He had already been aware, for example,     6     Lee had only 61,000 men to Hooker’s own 134,000. Supported by his superior numbers, Hooker secretly moved 70,000 of his men fifteen miles up and across the river, and then ordered them to sneak back down to position themselves     7     Lee’s army. In effect, Hooker had cut off the Confederate soldiers in front and behind. They were trapped. Satisfied with his advantage, Hooker became convinced that Lee’s only option was to retreat to Richmond, thus     8     (assure) a Union victory.

Yet Lee, despite his disadvantages of both numbers and position, did not retreat. Instead, he moved his troops into position to attack. Union soldiers who tried to warn Hooker that Lee was on the offensive     9     (dismiss) as cowards. Having become convinced that Lee had no choice but     10     (retreat), Hooker began to ignore reality. When Lee’s army attacked the Union soldiers at 5:00 p.m., they were eating supper, completely unprepared for battle. They abandoned their rifles and fled as Lee’s troops came shrieking out of the brush, bayonets drawn. Against all odds, Lee won the Battle of Chancellorsville, and Hooker’s forces withdrew in defeat.

2019-01-06更新 | 932次组卷 | 3卷引用:上海市徐汇区2019届高三上学期期末学习能力诊断(含听力)英语试题
书信写作-其他应用文 | 较难(0.4) |
10 . 假定你是李华,你的英国朋友Jerry在给你的邮件中提到他对中国历史很感兴趣,并请你介绍一位你喜欢的中国历史人物。请你给Jerry回信,介绍一下中国的郑和,内容包括:
1.郑和是谁;
2.郑和的主要贡献;
3.郑和的影响。
注意:1.词数80左右;
2.可以适当增加细节,以使行文连贯。
Dear Jerry,
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Yours,

Li Hua

2023-01-30更新 | 124次组卷 | 1卷引用:江苏省南通市海安市实验中学2022-2023学年高二上学期1月月考英语试题
共计 平均难度:一般