上海市进才中学2022-2023学年高一下学期期末考试英语试题.docx
《上海市进才中学2022-2023学年高一下学期期末考试英语试题.docx》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《上海市进才中学2022-2023学年高一下学期期末考试英语试题.docx(10页珍藏版)》请在淘文阁 - 分享文档赚钱的网站上搜索。
1、上海市进才中学2022-2023学年高一下学期期末考试英语试题学校:姓名:班级:考号:一、用单词的适当形式完成短文Directions: After reading the passage below, fill in the blanks to make the passages coherent and grammatically correct. For the blanks with a given word, fill in each blank with the proper form of the given word; for the other blanks, use one
2、 word that best fits each blank.“Love is dead,“ we say, reading yet another story of a celebrity split. We likely dont know the Hollywood stars, let alone have a close relationship with them, and yet, here we are mourning the tragedy with friends and on social media 1 it were a personal loss.Apparen
3、tly, its not unusual to feel completely heartsick over a celebrity breakup, according to Lindsay Henderson, PsyD, a psychologist 2 treats patients virtually via tclchcalth app, LivcHcaithOnlinc. Generally speaking, part of the general publics ever-present fascination with the lives of celebrities st
4、ems from the fact that we tend to view celebrities as successful people/ she says. As such, we slrive 3 (learn)from their actions in an attempt to be successful ourselves.Chris Pratt and Anna Faris are the most recent example of this dynamic. They announced their breakup earlier this week, explainin
5、g that they tried hard fbr a long time, and are “really disappointed.v The couple was far from alone in that. Thousands took to social media to express cheir sadness.“When a celebrity couple breaks up, the part of ourselves that we try to model after the celebrity, whether consciously or unconscious
6、ly, 4 (question) and even injured,M Dr. Henderson explains. Our over-identification with the celebrity ends up causing personal discomfort, and 5 we have elevated them to achieving such enviable success, their failings can sometimes be more troubling to us than 6 of the people in our lives that we a
7、ctually know and have relationships with.”The sadness 7 (feel) by celebrity breakups do, of course, point back to our own reality. A breakup is a rude reminder 8 the pain and struggle that comes with a negative event can happen to anyone; if divorce can happen to them, it can certainly happen to us
8、too, Dr. Henderson adds.Luckily, all hope is not lost, and we can mentally prepare for the next celebrity split so it discipline.E. These dedications, however, would influence more than just the realm (领域)of the natural sciences.F. Never facing ourselves is why we feel lonely and anxious in spite of
9、 being connected with everything else.六、汉译英(整句)51 .因缺少资金,公众直到最近才得以进入这个商业中心。(accessible)(汉译英)52 .地震发生后,志愿者们不怕危险第一时间赶到现场开展救援救生命的工作。(Hardly)(汉译英)53 .令雇主吃惊的是,在求职过程中,比起工资,弹性工作制更吸引大学毕业生。(appeal) (汉译英)54 .作为农业领域的先锋人物,袁隆平选择走了一条人迹罕至的道路,不遗余力解决粮 食短缺问题,把人们从饥饿中解救出来。(spare)(汉译英)doesnt feel as devastating. First,
10、its important to recognize and acknowledge 9upsetting these breakups can be. It is good to remind 10 that celebrities are normal people facing the same basic human emotions and struggles that everyone else docs, Dr. Henderson says. After that, its all about not trying to emulate (模仿)celebrities life
11、styles, but instead, living through your own journey.二、选用适当的单词或短语补全短文Directions: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.A. occasionally B. opt C. witnessed D. subject E. spans F. available G. lined H.
12、 promising I. steadily J. dawn K. escapingRoute 66, the historic highway known as Americas Main Street”. The 2, 400-milc, two-lane road, completed in 1932, passed through eight states and three time zones between Chicago and Los Angeles. Historically, II with gas stations and dusty little American t
13、owns, Route 66 was the road to the 12 land. California.When it was established in 1926, it was a beacon of progress at the 13 of the automobile age. h became (he path(o a better life in (he 1930s for Okies (流动雇农)4 (he Dust Bowl (沙尘暴).It served troops in the 1940s as their convoys(车队)prepared to ente
14、r World War II. It reached its pop culture peak in the 1950s and 1960s as the icon of the American road trip. Il was immortalized in song and was even the 15 of a popular television show.“Following the publication of * Route 66: The Mother Road in 1990,1 was often asked if I was surprised by all the
15、 attention my book received from the news media and the public,M says Michael Wallis, co-fbunder of the Route 66 Alliance. uMy early response was that I was not surprised since I knew there were many others who knew that the historic highway was not only alive and well but that at least 85 percent o
16、f the Mother Road was still 16 for travelers to enjoy.However, it was not long before my attitude changed, as I 17 (he unprecedented increase of interest in Route 66 across the nation and, in time, around the world. Thosenumbers have 18con (in ued to spiral upward. I know ihal (he future of Route 66
17、 is notonly assured but glowing as bright as a band of neon (霓虹)Small communities are seeing new life as tourists and road -tri ppers 19 for the old two-lane passage to get a sense of what they were missing on cruise control. Route 66 20eight states, from the cornfields of Illinois to the beach in C
18、alifornia. Oklahoma has over 400 miles within its borders, more than any other state. The road also is known as the Will Rogers Highway, after the Sooner States most famous son.三、完形填空It is widely believed that adolescents engage in risky behaviors because of tolerance for risks by nature, but a stud
19、y by researchers at New York University Yales School of Medicine, and Fordham University has found this is not the case.Their findings show adolescents appear to 21 their older peers in (he taste for the uncertain. When faced with situations that have highly uncertain outcomes, most 22 groups react
20、with dislike; adolescents, 23, often find these uncertain situations quitetolerable. Rather than having a taste for risk, as is commonly thought, the risky behaviors of adolescents originate from their 24 with the ambiguous(模棱两可的).These findings, which are reported in the journal the Proceedings of
21、the National Academy of Sciences, point to basic differences between adolescents and adults and offer new 25 into how to communicate about risk to teenagers and pre-teens.“Our findings show that teenagers nowadays enter unsafe situations not because they are drawn to dangerous or risky situations, b
22、ut, rather, because they arent 26 enough of the possibility of the consequences of their actions/ explained Agnieszka Tyniula, one of the studys co-authors. 4tOncc they truly 27 a risky situation, they are, if anything, even more unwilling to take risks than adults. The study also offers new possibi
23、lities for communicating with this age group -providing adolescents with statistics 28 the risks of dangerous behaviors or training (hat allows them to learn about risks in a safe way, which may be effective in 29 them.” What we found was that when risks were clearly stated, adolescents 30 them at l
24、east as much, and sometimes more, than adults, “added I fat Levy, one of the studys co-authors at the Yale School of Medicine. Adolescents were, however, much more 31 of ambiguity. 32 this makes a lot of sense: young organisms need to be open to the 33 in order to gain information about their world.
- 配套讲稿:
如PPT文件的首页显示word图标,表示该PPT已包含配套word讲稿。双击word图标可打开word文档。
- 特殊限制:
部分文档作品中含有的国旗、国徽等图片,仅作为作品整体效果示例展示,禁止商用。设计者仅对作品中独创性部分享有著作权。
- 关 键 词:
- 上海市 中学 2022 2023 学年 一下 学期 期末考试 英语试题
限制150内