专题06 阅读理解之说明文10篇(第一期)-备战2024年高考英语名校模拟真题速递(新高考专用)含答案.docx
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1、备战2024年高考英语名校模拟真题速递(新高考专用)第一期专题06 阅读理解之说明文10篇(2023湖北开滦第二中学校考模拟预测)Its no secret that non-alcoholic beer tastes much worse than regular beer, but scientists in Denmark now claim to have developed a way of making it taste just as satisfying. What non-alcoholic beer lacks is the flavor from hops (啤酒花).
2、When you remove the alcohol from the beer, for example by heating it up, you also kill the flavor that comes from hops. Other methods for making alcohol-free beer also lead to poor flavor because alcohol is needed for hops to pass their unique flavor to the beer. “After years of research, we have fo
3、und a way to produce monoterpenoids (单萜), which provide the flavor, and then add them to the beer at the end of the process of making beer to give back its lost flavor. No one has been able to do this before, so its a game changer for non-alcoholic beer,” the Danish professor added. This method of a
4、rtificially recreating the flavor of hops using monoterpenoids is currently being tested in factories producing across Denmark, and the plan is to have a plan ready for the countrys entire beer industry by the end of October. Although non-alcoholic beer has been growing in popularity at a very rapid
5、 pace, the new thing announced by Sotirios Kampranis and his team could have major meaning for the entire beer industry and our environment. Growing hops is a very wasteful process, with one kilogram of hops requiring no less than 2.7 tons of water. “With our method, we skip hops and the water and t
6、he transportation. This means that one kilogram of hops can be produced with more than 10,000 times less water and more than 100 times less CO2,” Kampranis said. “When the monoterpenoids are released from yeast, we collect them and put them into the beer, giving back the taste of regular beer that s
7、o many of us know and love.” he added.1What plays a key role in making beer?AHops.BWater.CCO2.DPatience.2What can we learn about the new non-alcoholic beer?AIt is the best beer in the market.BIt has been produced in many countries.CIt has the same taste with the traditional beer.DIt is very popular
8、with the young in Denmark.3What does Kampranis think the new non-alcoholic beer?AIt is a process filled with waste.BIt is environmentally friendly.CIt needs better transportation.DIt gets an unexpected response.4In which section can we read this text in a newspaper?ASports.BCulture.CEducation.DTechn
9、ology.(2023春安徽池州高三池州市第一中学校考阶段练习)We are the products of evolution, and not just evolution that occurred billions of years ago. As scientists look deeper into our genes (基因), they are finding examples of human evolution in just the past few thousand years. People in Ethiopian highlands have adapted to
10、 living at high altitudes. Cattle-raising people in East Africa and northern Europe have gained a mutation (突变) that helps them digest milk as adults.On Thursday in an article published in Cell, a team of researchers reported a new kind of adaptationnot to air or to food, but to the ocean. A group o
11、f sea-dwelling people in Southeast Asia have evolved into better divers. The Bajau, as these people are known, number in the hundreds of thousands in Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines. They have traditionally lived on houseboats; in recent times, theyve also built houses on stilts (支柱) in coas
12、tal waters. “They are simply a stranger to the land,” said Rodney C Jubilado, a University of Hawaii researcher who studies the Bajau.Dr. Jubilado first met the Bajau while growing up on Samal Island in the Philippines. They made a living as divers, spearfishing or harvesting shellfish. “We were so
13、amazed that they could stay underwater much longer than we local islanders,” Dr. Jubilado said. “I could see them actually walking under the sea.”In 2015, Melissa Ilardo, then a graduate student in genetics at the University of Copenhagen, heard about the Bajau. She wondered if centuries of diving c
14、ould have led to the evolution of physical characteristics that made the task easier for them. It seemed like the perfect chance for natural selection to act on a population,” said Dr. Ilardo. She also said there were likely a number of other genes that help the Bajau dive.5What does the author want
15、 to tell us by the examples in Paragraph 1?AEnvironmental adaptation of cattle raisers.BNew knowledge of human evolution.CRecent findings of human origin.DSignificance of food selection.6Where do the Bajau build their houses?AOn the beach.BNear rivers.COff the coast.DIn valleys.7Why was the young Ju
16、bilado astonished at the Bajau?AThey could walk on stilts all day.BThey had a superb way of fishing.CThey could stay long underwater.DThey lived on both land and water.8In which section of a newspaper can this text appear?AEntertainmentBScienceCHealthDSport(2023浙江德清县高级中学校考模拟预测)A handshake seems to b
17、e a normal gesture. In fact, in the 9th century BC, an ancient site during the ruling of Shalmaneser III clearly shows two figures holding hands. The Iliad, usually dated to the 8th century BC, mentions that two characters “taking each others hands and expressing their loyalty.” Centuries later, Sha
18、kespeare once wrote of two characters who shook hands and swore to be brothers in the book As You Like It. Shaking hands seems to be an ancient custom whose roots have disappeared in the sands of time.Historians who have studied ancient etiquette (礼仪) books note that the modem handshake did not appe
19、ar until the middle of the 19th century, when it was considered a slightly inappropriate gesture that could only be used between friends. But what if Shakespeare had written about handshaking hundreds of years earlier?According to author Torbjdm Lundmark in his Tales of Hi and Bye: Greeting and Part
20、ing Rituals Around the World. the problem comes in differing definitions of the handshake. The early handshakes mentioned above were part of making deals or peace; King Shalmaneser III referred to a rebellion in which he signed a treaty with the King of Babylon. In the Iliad, Diomedes and Glaucus sh
21、ook hands when they realized they were guest-friends, and Diomedes declared: 66Lefs not try to kill each other. Shakespeare was similarly referencing settlement of a conflict.The modern handshake as a form of greeting is harder to trace. As a Dutch sociologist Herman Roodenburg the chief authority f
22、or the history of handshaking wrote in a chapter of an anthology called A Cultural History of Gesture, “More than in any other field, that of the study of gesture is one in which the historian has to make the most of only a few clues”.One of the earliest clues he cites is a 16th-century German trans
23、lation of the French writer Rabelaiss Gargantua and Pantagruel. When one character meets Gargantua, Rabelais writes, ”He was greeted by countless hugs and countless good days.” But according to Roodenburg, the 16th-century German translation added references to shaking hands.A popular saying suggest
24、s that Clelands statements against bowing were actually a wish to go back to a potentially traditional method of greeting in Europe. As the centuries progressed, handshaking was replaced by more hierarchical (等级的)ways of greeting - like bowing. According to Roodenburg, handshaking survived in a few
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