兰州一中2016高三9月月考英语试卷及答案精选.doc
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1、兰州一中2015-2016-1高三年级第一次月考 英语试题本试卷分第I卷(选择题)和第II卷(非选择题)两部分第I卷第一部分 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)阅读下列短文,从每题所给四个选项中,选出最佳选项。A The writings of Shakespeare are today little read by young people in Britain. His young readership is limited to those who choose to study literature at university. Shakesp
2、eares work, together with most other classics, is seen as remote, and written in a 400-year-old version of English that is about as inviting as toothache. Still, in Britain schools, it is compulsory to study the bard (诗人), and when something is made compulsory, usually the result is boredom, resentm
3、ent (憎恨)or both. This was my experience of the classics at school. But when I reached my late teenage years, I had a change of heart. Like every other young person since the dawn of time, the world confused me. I wanted answers, so I turned to books to find them. I went on to take a PhD in literatur
4、e and have taught it in Britain and China. I have never regretted it. There is something in literature that people want, even if they dont read books. You see this in the popularity of TV and movie adaptations of great works, the recent film version of Jane Austens Pride and Prejudice being a case i
5、n point. These popular adaptations may help increase peoples interest in the classics. Reading a simplified Romeo and Juliet may perhaps lead to a reading of Shakespeares actual play. If that is the case, then I welcome the trend. But do not make the mistake of thinking that it is the same thing. Sh
6、akespeare is a poet. His greatness is in his language. Reading someone elses rewriting of his work is like peeling a banana, throwing away the fruit, and eating the skin. Take on the original. It really is worth the effort.1. Which of the following is true according to the passage? A. The language u
7、sed in classics is no longer in use today. B. British students usually find compulsory reading dull. C. Only those studying literature read Shakespeares works. D. For British people, Shakespeares works are no longer classics.2. According to the passage, the writer _. A. has liked literary classics s
8、ince an early age B. was forced to read the classics for a PhD C. turned to literature to seek answers in his teens D. thinks only people who read books like literature3. The popularity of TV and movie adaptations of great works may help people _. A. learn more about tradition B. get a PhD in litera
9、ture C. seek their answers about the world D. become more interested in the classics4. The underlined phrase “a case in point” in paragraph 5 is closest in meaning to “_”. A. a great hit B. a good example C. a movie adaptation D. a popular phenomenon5. What does the writer intend to tell us in the l
10、ast paragraph? A. The fruit of a banana is more useful than its skin. B. The rewriting trend does more harm than good. C. Readers should try to read the original versions. D. Readers need to learn the language in the classics.B For Kim LeBlanc, knowing that her son Tylers organs, eyes and other tiss
11、ues have given life or healing to others is helping her cope with the loss of her child, who was struck by a truck in Guelph on May 31. Tyler was believed to have been texting a friend when he stepped onto a high-traffic road against the green light and was struck by the truck. Then he was sent to a
12、 Hamilton hospital. Surgery was performed to ease the pressure in his brain, but .the family was told he would not recover. “With all of his injuries, I just prayed all night for a miracle. And I was granted a miracle, but not in the way Id expected,” says LeBlanc, her voice choked by emotion. The f
13、amily decided to donate Tylers organs, a choice she believes her kind and considerate son would have made on his own. Its also a choice that transplant programs wish would be made more often, because the need for donor organs is far more than the supply worldwide. More than 1,500 people in Ontario a
14、re on the waiting list for life-saving organs, and one dies every day because an organ has not become available in time. Across Canada, the gap between donations and the need for organs continues to widen. At the end of 2010, more than 4,400 Canadians were on the waiting list for donor organs, inclu
15、ding 3,362 needing a kidney. That year, 229 died before the organs they needed became available. LeBlanc recalls the morning when her son was taken off life support and his organs were removed. Despite living what she calls a parents absolute worst nightmare, LeBlanc says she has got the strength to
16、 bear such an unbearable loss. “Hes still there. Hes still living. And hes still breathing. And hes brought so much joy to families,” she says. “Hes my hero. He really is my hero.”6. Tyler was struck by the truck mainly because_. A. he broke the traffic rule B. he was talking with his friends C. the
17、 truck ignored him D. the truck ran at a high speed7. The figures in paragraph 4 show that _. A. more people begin to donate their organs B. more people are dying during organ transplant operations C. many people dont know how to donate their organs D. many people are in great need of organ transpla
18、nt worldwide8. It is implied in the last paragraph that _. A. LeBlanc was desperate about Tylers death B. LeBlanc will never forget Tylers contribution C. LeBlanc felt relieved with Tylers organ donated D. LeBlanc has never thought that Tyler will be a heroC Nowadays more and more people are talking
19、 about genetically modified foods ( GM foods). GM foods develop from genetically modified organisms (有机体), which have had specific changes introduced into their DNA by genetic engineering techniques. These techniques are much more precise where an organism is exposed to chemicals to create a non-spe
20、cific but stable change. For many people, the high-tech production raises all kinds, of environmental, ethical(伦理的), health and safety problems. Particularly in countries with long farming traditions, the idea seems against nature. In fact, GM foods are already very much a part of our lives. They we
21、re first put on the market in 1996. A third of the corn and more than half the cotton grown in the US last year was the product of biotechnology, according to the Department of Agriculture. More than 65 million acres of genetically modified crops will be planted in the US this year. The genetic geni
22、e is out of the bottle. However, like any new product entering the food chain, GM foods must be subjected to careful testing. In wealthy countries, the debate about biotech is not so fierce by the fact that they have a large number of foods to choose from, and a supply that goes beyond the needs. In
23、 developing countries desperate to feed fast-growing and under fed populations, the matter is simpler and much more urgent: do the benefits of biotech outweigh the risks? The statistics on population growth and hunger are disturbing. Last year the worlds population reached 6 billion. The UN states t
24、hat nearly 800 million people around the world are unhealthy. About 400 million women of childbearing age dont have enough iron, which means their babies are exposed to various birth defeats. As many as 100 million children suffer from vitamin A deficiency, a leading cause of blindness. How can biot
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