高考英语阅读之记叙文 说明文基础训练.doc
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1、2022高考英语阅读之记叙文+说明文基础训练(A)In real life Joanna Garcia Swisher, 41, is happily married to former Major League Baseball player Nick Swisher, 40, and raising daughters Sailor, 4, and Emerson, 7. On TV she needs the help of a matchmaker to find love in the new Hallmark Channel romance As Luck Would Have I
2、t. She opens up about raising strong girls, how her parents recent deaths affected her and which roles fans recognize her for the most. You havent needed a matchmaker-but if life had turned out differently, would you use one? I would totally have been game for it. I was set up by a friend of ours to
3、 meet my husband, but I think it sounds so fun. You star opposite Allen Leech-were you a Downton Abbey fan? Im a huge Downton fan, but I know Allen personally very well. He happened to marry my best friends little sister. His mom actually cooked me dinner a couple of times while I was shooting! Youv
4、e been on TV since you were a teen. Which role gets you recognized most? Sweet Magnolias now. But overall I would say Reba. I also get recognized for being Amy Adams more than I get recognized for being myself. You lost your mother, father and grandmother in the past year and a half. How are you and
5、 your family doing? My daughters have watched me go through so much in the last year, from the highs of the success of Sweet Magnolias to the lowest of lows, losing my parents and my grandmother. I really believe that its not what happens to you, its what happens for you. Even in their passing, as t
6、ragic as it was. I know that its not for nothing. My mom was such a strong, capable, amazing woman; my father was the ultimate father and feminist and just huge source of support-and I think that solidified my strength. So I only hope that Im modeling that same strength for my girls. 1. How does the
7、 text develop?A. By questions and answers.B. By listing examples.C. By narrating life stories.D. By comparison and contrast.2. What does Joanna Garcia Swisher think of a matchmaker in marriage?A. Its strange.B. Its acceptable. C. Its terrible.D. Its necessary.3. What does the underlined part in the
8、last paragraph imply?A. Joanna was just playing on words. B. Joanna missed her parents much.C. Joanna submitted herself to her fate. D.Joanna faced the tragedy positively. 4. What can best describe Joanna Garcia Swisher according to the text?A. Simple and talkative.B. Stubborn and influential.C. Str
9、ong and easy-going. D. Negative and sensitive(B)Rats and other animals need to be highly tuned to social signals from others so they can identify friends to cooperate with and enemies to avoid. To find out if this extends to non-living beings, Loleh Quinn at the University of California, San Diego,
10、and her colleagues tested whether rats can detect social signals from robotic rats.They housed eight adult rats with two types of robotic rat one social and one asocial (不爱社交的) for 5 days. The robotic rat resembled a bigger version of a computer mouse with wheels to move around and colorful markings
11、.During the experiment, the social robotic rat followed the living rats around, played with the same toys, and opened caged doors to let trapped rats escape. Meanwhile, the asocial robot simply moved forwards and backwards and side to side.Next, the researchers trapped the robots in cages and gave t
12、he rats the opportunity to release them by pressing a button. Across 18 trials each, the living rats were 52 percent more likely on average to set the social robot free than the asocial one. This suggests that the rats perceived the social robot as a genuine social being. They may have bonded more w
13、ith the social robot, because it displayed behaviours like communal (共同的) exploring and playing. “This could lead to the rats better remembering having freed it earlier, and wanting the robot to return the favour when they get trapped,” says Quinn.The readiness of the rats to befriend the social rob
14、ot was surprising given its plain design. The finding shows how sensitive rats are to social signals, even when they come from basic robots. Similarly, children tend to treat robots as if they are fellow beings, even when they display simple social signals. “We humans seem to be fascinated by robots
15、, and it turns out other animals are too,” says Wiles.1. Quinn and her colleagues conducted a test to see if rats can .A. pick up social signals from non-living ratsB. distinguish friends from enemiesC. learn sociable skills through trainingD. send out warning messages to their fellows2. What did th
16、e social robot do during the experiment?A. It followed the asocial robot.B. It made friends with toys.C. It set the trapped rats free.D. It moved around alone.3 Why did the rats release the social robot according to Quinn?A. They tried to practice a means of escape.B. They expected it to do the same
17、 in return.C. They wanted to display their intelligence.D. They considered it an interesting game.4. What can we learn from the text?A. Rats are highly adaptable to new surroundings.B. Rats are more socially active than other animals.C. Rats behave differently from children in socializing.D. Rats ar
18、e more sensitive to social signals than expected.(C)About seven years ago, Kristin and Josh Mohagen were honeymooning in Napa Valley in California, when they smelled something surprising in their glasses of wine; green pepper. It was explained that the grapes in that bottle had ripened on a hillside
19、 alongside a field of green peppers. That was my first experience with terroir , Josh Mohagen says.It made an impression. Inspired by their time in Napa, the Mohagens returned home and launched a chocolate business based on the principle of terroir , often defined as sense of place”.The definition o
20、f terroir is somewhat fluid. Wine enthusiasts use the French term to describe the environmental conditions in which a grape is grown that give a wine its unique taste and smell. The soil, climate and even the orientation(朝向)of a hillside or the company of neighboring plants, and insects play a role.
21、 Some experts expand terroir to include specific cultural practices for growing and processing grapes that could also influence taste.The idea of terroir is quite old. In the Middle Ages, the wine-makers in Burgundy, France, divided the countryside into different climate areas, according to differen
22、ces in the landscape that seemed to translate into unique wine characteristics. Wines produced around the village of Gearey-Chambertin, for example, “are famous for being fuller-bodied, powerful arid more tannic than most, says Joe Quinn, wine director of The Red Hen, a restaurant in Washington, D.
23、C. In contrast, the wines from the village of Chambolle- Musigny, just a few miles south, are widely considered to be more fine, delicate and light- bodied.”A recent wave of scientific research suggests that the environment and production practices can, in fact, produce a chemical or microbial (微生物的
24、)signature so distinctive that scientists can use the signature to trace food back to its origin. And in some cases, these techniques are beginning to offer clues on how terroir can shape the smell and taste of food and drinks.1. What impressed the Mohagens most during their stay in Napa?A. The smel
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