辽宁省沈阳铁路实验中学2015_2016学年高二英语上学期第二次月考试题.doc
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1、沈阳铁路实验中学2015-2016学年度上学期第二次月考高二英语 时间:100分钟 分数:120分第一部分 阅读理解( 共两节,满分40分)第一节(共15小题;每小题2分,满分30分)AOn the black market, ivory commands more than $1,000 per kilogram, making poaching(偷猎) a problem for African wildlife. But an American pilot is trying to end the killing by training the pilots who patrol(巡逻)
2、 the skies over Africa. Patty Wagstaff who is making a difference by helping her fellow pilots deal with difficult and life-threatening conditions.Wagstaff is the lead teacher for a group of wildlife pilots in Kenya. “The pilots are good, basic pilots,”said Patty Wagstaff. “But they just havent had
3、the training or the experience to mot make the mistakes you make when youre not professionally trained.”Patty Wagstaffs pilots patrol plains, flying low to the ground at near-stall speed, looking for poachers.“Its so sad whats happening,” she said. “ The poaching is getting worse. Flight is becoming
4、 more important because its been told by poachers that flying is the single biggest deterrent to them. So what these pilots are doing is really important.”Red dust kicks up the heart of the afternoon as the airplanes start their engines. And any maintenance is basic. Every airplane has crashed at le
5、ast once or has been shot at by poachers.The pilots gather every year for week-long clinics. The project is funded in part by Anne Morrow Lindbergh Foundation, named after the famed American aviator Charles Lindbergh, who flew the first alone, non-stop flight across the Atlantic.Patty Wagstaff says
6、her special skills help to remove objections to being taught by a woman.“When it all comes down to it, we get up in the air and I can show them a few things,” said Patty Wagstaff. “And if they give me any problems, Ill just flip them upside down, so.”Poaching decreases when these pilots are in the a
7、ir. And their love of flying combines with their love of nature.“We have this amazing resource, this global resource that you find in very few places in the world thats becoming more and more endangered elephants, and everything else we fly over every day here and it belongs to everything else we fl
8、y over every day here and it belongs to everybody,” said Wagstaff.1. In the opinion of Wagstaff, Kenyas pilots _.A. are lack of formal trainingB. have no potential ability of flyingC. dont know the basic knowledge of flightD. have no sense of obeying discipline 2. It can be inferred in the text that
9、_.A. Wagstaff taught pilots to learn from LindberghB. Wagstaff could drive trouble-making pilots out of planesC. some pilots used to be ashamed of having a woman teacherD. poachers tried to find chance to kill Wagstaff 3. The main idea of the passage is about _.A. Wagstaff meets with life-threatenin
10、g conditions in flightB. Wagstaff flies across Kenya to catch poachersC. Wagstaff took Lindbergh as her modelD. Wagstaff helps Kenyas pilots battle poachers4. From what Wagstaff said in the last paragraph, we know that he thought _.A. everybody has the duty to protect animalsB. her saw animals being
11、 killed every dayC. nowhere else can you find elephants but KenyaD. his country was rich in wild life resources BIt started with a nudge.People are hooking up all over the Internet. It can be just for fun, or it can get serious. Love, jealousy: an online relationship involves all the emotions of an
12、offline one. But there are some big differences.True liesSome people find it easier to type their true thoughts than admit to them face-to-face. So in some ways you get more honesty online. You might learn about someone much faster in a chat window than on a date.On the other hand, the Internet is t
13、he perfect place to tell lies: some small, some whoppers. Its easy to create a whole new identity. And you can never be 100% sure that the person youre talking to is who they say they are.If you get involved with someone online, you need proof of who they really are before you even consider taking t
14、he relationship further.Remember that photos are no guarantee. Theres nothing to stop some old beggar sending you a picture of a swimwear model(or vice versa).Keeping it realUse the same rules to online relationships that you would like to meet in the real world. Its great to joke, but set clear bou
15、ndaries. And remember, it might take time before you can fully trust someone.Stepping it upWebcams and phone chats can get quite full on. Its normal to feel nervous about having intimate conversations online. You should only go as far as you want and never feel pressured into anything youre not comf
16、ortable with.The final option is meeting up. It could work, but make sure you know the dangers. Alternatively, you might never want your relationship to leave the chat room, thats fine too.5. Sometimes people online may _.A. easily speak their mindsB. become curious about other quicklyC. be much mor
17、e emotionalD. find it fun to love someone online6. The word “whoppers” may mean _.A. big facesB. big liesC. big placesD. big windows 7. The writer seems to agree to the view that _.A. dont play the same jokes on the net as those in the real worldB. people who cheat online become honest easilyC. it i
18、s good for you not to meet a net friend freelyD. you shouldnt believe words but photos on the net. 8. The main idea of the passage is about _.A. online shopping B. online gamesC. online bullying D. online relationshipsCLaughing is our first way of communicating. Apes laugh. So do dogs and rats. Babi
19、es laugh long before they speak. No one teaches you how to laugh. You just do.You may laugh at a prank(恶作剧) on April Fools Day. But surprisingly, only 10 to 15 percent of laughter is the result of someone making a joke, said Robert Province, who has studied laughter for decades. Laughter is mostly a
20、bout social responses rather than reaction to a joke.“All language groups laugh ha-ha-ha basically the same way, ” he said. “Whether you speak Mandarin, French or English, everyone will understand laughter. Theres a pattern generator in our brain that produces this sound.”Each “ha” is about one-15th
21、 of a second, repeated every fifth of a second, he said. Laughing faster or slower than that sounds more like panting(喘) or something else.Deaf people laugh without hearing, and people on cell phones laugh without seeing, illustrating that laughter isnt dependent on a single sense but on social inte
22、ractions, said Province.Other animals laugh, too. Chimps tickle(挠痒痒) each other and even laugh when another chimp pretends to tickle them.Panksepp studies that rats laugh when he tickles them. It turns out rats love to be tickled. They return again and again to the hands of researchers tickling them
23、.By studying rats, Panksepp and other scientists can figure out whats going on in the brain during laughter. And it holds promise for human ills. Professor Jeffrey Burgdorf has found that laughter in rats produces an insulin-like growth factor chemical that acts as an antidepressant and anxiety-redu
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