外研版高中英语必修第三册Unit5单元测试试卷含答案-答案在前2.docx
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1、Unit 5 What an adventure!单元测试答案解析听力材料Text 1W: Sorry, sir. We are working on your order right now and well be delivering it soon.M: Soon? How soon? You said “soon” an hour ago.Text 2W: Shouldnt we invite more people to the housewarming party? The more, the merrier.M: Anything you say.Text 3W: How car
2、eless I was! I promised to cook dinner for you but I forgot to buy the vegetables.M: Never mind. That restaurant in our neighborhood opens 24 hours a day.Text 4W: I hope you can understand my reasons for deciding to leave, Mr. Harrison.M: Do I have to remind you that we have invested a lot of time a
3、nd money in your career here?Text5W: I told you to give up smoking, Jim, didnt I?M: Yes, you did. But I cant control myself now.W: Its not only bad for yourself, but also for me and our children.M: Sorry, I wontText 6W: Hi, Im Sara. I dont think Ive seen you before. Are you visiting someone here?M:
4、Hi. Im Henry. I live here now. I moved here with my family just about two weeks ago.W: No wonder I havent seen you before. So where did you move from?M: Los Angeles, but I wasnt born there. I was born in New York.W: So why did you move to New Orleans?M: Because my father wanted to start a business h
5、ere.Text 7M: I dont know how you can sit and do your homework in here. Ifs so cold. Why havent you turned your air conditioner on? Is it still broken?W: Oh, dad fixed it yesterday, so it should be OK now. Itll soon warm up the room. I just didnt notice. I was too busy working on my computer.M: Well,
6、 Tve come to borrow your lamp. I still havenl got one and my room is really dark.W: Well. That one wont help you. I knocked it over. It needs repairing.高中英语必修第三册1 / 7高中英语必修第三册2 / 10volcanoes so explosive that they burst open in a single big crack, leaving behind a vast hole, the caldera. Yellowstone
7、obviously was of this second type, but Christiansen couldnl find the caldera anywhere.Just at this time NASA decided to test some new high-altitude cameras by taking photographs of Yellowstone. A thoughtful official passed on some of the copies to the park authorities on the assumption that they mig
8、ht make a nice blow-up for one of the visitors1 centers. As soon as Christiansen saw the photos, he realized why he had failed to spot the caldera: almost the whole park2.2 million acreswas caldera. The explosion had left a hole more thanforty miles acrossmuch too huge to be seen from anywhere at gr
9、ound level. At some time in the past Yellowstone must have blown up with a violence far beyond the scale of anything known to humans.()21. What puzzled Christiansen when he was studying Yellowstone?A. Its complicated geographical features.B. Its ever-lasting influence on tourism.C. The mysterious hi
10、story of the park.D. The exact location of the volcano.()22. What does the second paragraph mainly talk about?A. The shapes of volcanoes.B. The impacts of volcanoes.C. The activities of volcanoes.D. The heights of volcanoes.()23. What does the underlined word “blow-up in the last paragraph most prob
11、ably mean?A. Hot-air balloon. B. Digital camera.C. Big photograph. D. Birds view.BStonehenge (巨石阵)may have been a prehistoric health center rather than a site for observing stars or a templein honor of the dead, scientists said yesterday. New evidence unearthed at the World Heritage Site in more tha
12、n 40years suggests that the monument was a place where the diseased and injured went in groups, seeking cures.After a two-week dig, scientists have concluded that Stonehenge was “the ancient healthcare centre of southernEngland55 because of the existence of “bluestones一the smaller columns of dolerit
13、e (辉绿岩)that formed an earlier stone structure.By dating pieces of remains to around 7330 BC, Tim Darvill, of Bournemouth University, and Goff Wainwright, of the Society of Antiquaries have found that hunter-gatherers were at the site on Salisbury Plain 4,000 years earlier than thought. The first sta
14、ge of Stonehenge, a round earthwork structure, was built around 3000 BC. ProfessorWainwright added: ul did not expect the degree of complexity we discovered. Were able to say so much more about when Stonehenge was built and whyall of which changes our previous understanding of the monument.”The rese
15、arch reveals the importance of the henges famous bluestones. Hundreds of bluestone chips gathered at the site have led the team to conclude that the bluestones were valued for their curing effectsthe key reason that高中英语必修第三册3 / 10eating animals.I believe the main reason why the modern hunter kills i
16、s that he thinks people will admire his courage in overpowering dangerous animals. Of course, there are some who truly believe that the killing is not really the important thing, and that the chief pleasure lies in the joy of the hunt and the beauties of the wild countryside. There are also those fo
17、r whom hunting in fact offers a chance to prove themselves and risk death by design; these men go out after dangerous animals like tigers, even if they say they only do it to rid the countryside of a threat. I can respect reasons like these, but they are clearly different from the need to strengthen
18、 your high opinion of yourself.The greatest big-game hunters expressed in their writings something of these finer motives. One of them wrote: “You must properly respect what you are after and shoot it cleanly and on the animaPs own territory (领地). You must fix forever in your mind all the wonders of
19、 that particular day. This is better than letting him grow a few years older to be attacked and wounded by his own son and eventually eaten, half alive, by other animals. Hunting is not a cruel and senseless killingnot if you respect the thing you kill, not if you kill to enrich your memories, not i
20、f you Mil to feed your people.5,I can understand such beliefs, and can compare these hunters with those who hunted lions with spears (矛) and bravely caught them by the tail. But this is very different from many tiger-shoots I have seen, in which modern weapons were used. The so-called hunters fired
21、from tall trees or from the backs of trained elephants. Such methods made tigers seem no more dangerous than rabbits.()28. There is no more hunting in India now partly because.A. it is dangerous to hunt therehunting is already out of datehunters want to protect animals D. there are few animals left
22、to hunt()29. The author thinks modern hunters kill mainlyA. to make the countryside safe B. to earn peoples admirationC. to gain power and influenceB. to improve their health()30. What do we learn about the big-gamehunters?A. They hunt old animals. B. They mistreat animals.C. They hunt for food.D. T
23、hey hunt for money.()31. What is the authors view on the tiger-shoots he has seen?A. Modern hunters lack the courage to hunt face-to-face.B. Modern hunters should use more advanced weapons.高中英语 必修第三册5 / 10C. Modern hunters like to hunt rabbits instead of tigers.D. Modern hunters should put their saf
24、ety first.DIncreasing numbers of airports, especially in Europe, are promoting a “silent airport,J idea. It is to reduce noise pollution, such as airport-wide announcements, without sacrificing timely and helpful updates of information.International airports were once characterized by their high voi
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