(整理版高中英语)专题三阅读理解(八).doc
《(整理版高中英语)专题三阅读理解(八).doc》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《(整理版高中英语)专题三阅读理解(八).doc(11页珍藏版)》请在淘文阁 - 分享文档赚钱的网站上搜索。
1、专题三 阅读理解(八)【省市高三第一次模拟考试】CWhen Allison Winn was eight and her family adopted a dog named Coco, they had no idea how much the little creature would change her life.“Coco helped me feel better, says Allison, who was recovering from l4 months of treatment for a brain cancer at the time. “She would cuddl
2、e偎依) with me when I didnt want to play. Allison loved Coco so much that she told her parents she wanted to help other sick kids find the same kind of comfort.She started small, raising money by selling lemonade and homemade dog biscuits in front of her house. Her first customer was the mailman. By t
3、he end of that summer, she had raised nearly $l,000, enough to adopt and train two dogs and give them to children with cancer. Now, a little more than two years later, some groups gather to make dog treats for Allisons cause.Her organization, the Stink Bug Project, named after a picture she drew in
4、memory of the end of her treatment, is run and managed in partnership with the Morgan Adams Foundation. Stink Bug helps families adopt pets from the Trained K9 Companion Program, where the rescued dogs are taught commands. Allisons mother, Dianna Litvak, who helps run Stink Bug, hopes to extend the
5、pet-adoption program statewide and continue donating some of the money to help fund childrens cancer research.“Allison has figured out how to help-in a way that no one else has, Litvak says. “We involve her younger sister, Emily, her friends, the adopting families, and some others. It took the love
6、of a little girl to wrap all that together into one amazing package.Go to stinkbugproject. org to donate or to buy Allisons dog biscuits.66. At the beginning, Allisons family .A. wanted other sick children to get the same comfortB. didnt know the sufferings of fighting a cancerC. thought a dogs comp
7、any would harm her healthD. didnt expect a dog could change her so much67. How did Allison start her cause?A. She helped advertise lemonade and homemade dog biscuits.B. She earned some money by doing small business.C. A mailman donated some money to her.D. Some groups gave her a hand.68. The name of
8、 Allisons organization, the Stink Bug Project, is from .A. one of her drawings B. her dogC. her homemade biscuits D. her friend69. According to Paragraph 4, Allisons mother feels .A. calm B. worried C. embarrassed D. proud70. Whats the passage mainly about?A. Helping to make dog treats. B. Adopting
9、a dog for your child.C. Giving dogs and love to kids with cancer. D. Raising money to train pets.【答案】6670 DBADC【省市高三第一次模拟考试】DSteven Spielbergs science-fiction thriller Minority Report produced a world where computers could read minds and predict the future. It seemed fanciful at the time, but fantas
10、y is edging closer to fact.On Jan. 3l, a team of scientists at the UC Berkeley, led by Robert Knight programmedcomputers to decode (解码) brain waves and replay them as words. Five months earlier,another group of Berkeley scientists showed their colleagues short movies and used computers to play back
11、in color what people saw.These experiments are a big advance from , when a French scientist first replayedimages from a human mind, a black-and-white checkerboard pattern. The possibilities, are great: a disabled person could “speak; doctors could access the mind of a patient who fainted; you could
12、rewatch your dreams on an iPad. There are, of course, equally dark side, such as the involuntary takeout of information from the brain.In spite of these breakthroughs, Jack Gallant, the neuroscientist who led the first Berkeley team, says current technology for decoding brain activity is still “rela
13、tively primitive. The field is held back by its poor machinery, in particular the fMRI.“Eventually, says Gallant, “someone will invent a decoding machine you can wear as a hat. Such an advance into the human mind, he says, might take 30 years.Still, the recent advances at Berkeley offer small answer
14、s, which scientists can use to begin unlocking the secrets of memory and consciousness.7l. What is the best title for the passage?A. New technology can read your mindB. Fantasy is edging closer to factC. A new discovery in human brainD. The intelligent computers in the future72. What did scientists
15、at the UC Berkeley do?A. They produced a fanciful world.B. They made computers jump forward like a human.C. They managed to translate brain waves into language.D. They used computers to make short movies.73. Which of the following is impossible for the research?A. It can help a disabled man recover
16、his ability of speech.B. Doctors can read a patients mind even if he is unconcious.C. People will know what happens in their dreams.D. Peoples thoughts may be given away.74. What plays a most important role in the development of the technology?A. A computer. B. An iPad. C. A decoding machine. D. A h
17、at.75. It can be inferred from the passage that .A. scientists got the inspiration from a movieB. the technology still has a long way to goC. the techology has been put into practiceD. scientists have unlocked the secrets of memory【答案】7175 ACACB【省市高三第一次模拟考试】阅读以下短文,从每题所给的四个选项A、B、C和D中选出最正确选项,并在答题卡上将该项
18、涂黑。AAlmost 20 years ago, a few days before Christmas, Roni Austins 6-year-old daughter, Lauren, went to a Jack in the Box in Carlsbad and ate a hamburger. She got sick, was rushed to a hospital and never came home. Lauren was the first to die in a multi-state E. coli outbreak that killed three other
19、 children and sickened 700 people. Like many people, Austin had never heard of E. coli before. At first bewildered, and then angry, Austin soon became the face of food-safety reform in California and beyond. She co-founded a nonprofit group, Safe Tables Our Priority (STOP), and pushed successfully f
20、or legislation (立法) requiring E. coli to be a reportable illness, so outbreaks could be followed and stopped sooner. Nervous initially to be in the spotlight, she learned not to fear politicians for the beef and fast-food industries. She was in the Oval Office when President Clinton signed the most
21、sweeping changes to federal food-inspection law in the 1990s. She was in Sacramento when a state measure named after her daughter passed, indicating minimum cooking temperatures in restaurants.Austin, 64, is not sure she has much choice. Every time she thinks shes handed off the baton (指挥棒) to other
22、s, though, something brings her back. A phone call from a parent who has lost a child to a food-borne illness. A news story about another outbreak. An event at La Costa Heights Elementary School, where redheaded Lauren was in first grade and where a memorial garden was planted in her honor.Fixing fo
23、od safety meant putting her career as a fashion designer on hold and flying 10 times to Washington DC to testify. It meant going to Sacramento to speak a half-dozen times. Shes not fond of the legislative process. Asked what shes proudest of in making her way through all that, she said, “That I didn
- 配套讲稿:
如PPT文件的首页显示word图标,表示该PPT已包含配套word讲稿。双击word图标可打开word文档。
- 特殊限制:
部分文档作品中含有的国旗、国徽等图片,仅作为作品整体效果示例展示,禁止商用。设计者仅对作品中独创性部分享有著作权。
- 关 键 词:
- 整理 高中英语 专题 阅读 理解
限制150内