精品解析:江苏省南京师范大学附属中学江宁分校2021-2022学年高二下学期4月月考英语试卷(原卷版).docx
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1、 2021-2022学年高二下学期南师江宁4月月考英语试卷第二部分阅读理解(共两节,满分50分)第一节 (共15小题;每小题2.5分,满分37.5分)阅读下列短文,从每题所给的A、B、C和 D四个选项中,选出最佳选项。AThere are many famous festivals around the world. The Carnivals in Rio de Janeiro and Venice,Munichs Oktoberfest and Londons Notting Hill Carnival are three examples. There are,however,festi
2、vals going on somewhere in the world every day of the year. These range from very large events which involve whole cities to local celebrations in tiny villages or neighbourhoods of towns or cities. We have selected a few of the more unusual,colourful festivals from around the world.Australia Day Co
3、ckroach(螳螂)Races:Brisbane,Queensland,Australia“ Racing is simple. . . the races are held in a circular track and cockroaches are then let go from an upturned bucket in the middle. . . first to the edge is a winner. Things are made a little more difficult in the steeplechase(障碍赛)events where a circul
4、ar fence is used to enhance the spectacle and test the cockroach talent. ”Canberra Sled Dog Classic:Canberra,Australian Capital Territory,AustraliaDog sledding is one of the fastest growing sports on the east coast of Australia. As theres no snow(the trail is earth and sand and is smooth and wide wi
5、th a few hills and turns),the sleds have wheels instead of runners,but the excitement is the sameDarwin Beer Can Regatta(划船比赛):Darwin,Northern Territory,AustraliaThis local charity event brings together great engineers and great drinkers. Participants construct everything from life-size beer-can can
6、oes to beer-can Viking warships during this off-the-wall regatta.La Tomatina:Bunol,Spain“ The tomato battle is in honor of Saint Luis Beltran. Residents and visitors take part in a tomato-throwing battle that uses more than 88,000 pounds of tomatoes. This crazy event began with a serious aim as a sy
7、mbolic protest against Franco. But the Tomatina is now regarded as an amusing way to end the summer. ”1. What do these selected festivals held in Australia have in common?A. They are famous festivals held in big cities.B. There are competitions in these festivals.C. They are celebrated in Northern A
8、ustralia.D. Animals or insects are involved in these festivals.2. Which festival will you go to if you are against Franco?A. The Carnivals in Rio de JaneiroB. Australia Day Cockroach RaceC. Canberra Sled Dog ClassicD. La Tomatina:Bunol,Spain3. From which is the text probably taken?A. A biology textb
9、ook.B. A health brochure.C. A research paper.D. A travel magazine.BA letter written to a 12-year-old girl in Lithuania was delivered in December, almost 51 years after it was sent. Now in her 60s, Genovefa Klonovska said after being handed the letter, “I thought that someone was pranking me.” The le
10、tter included a handmade, colored rose and two paper dolls. It was sent to Klonovska by a young girl in Poland. They exchanged letters in what is known as a pen pal program when people write letters to each other without actually meeting. The letter, together with 17 others, was discovered this past
11、 summer when a wall was taken down in a former post office in Vilnius. The letters, from the late 1960s and early 1970s, were likely hidden by a postal worker after he searched them for money or valuables, Vilutis said. The senders were family members or pen pals from places such as Australia, Polan
12、d, or Russia. Street names and their numbering have changed in Vilnius, capital of Lithuania. Post office workers spent months looking for the people who were supposed to receive the letters the recipients. Only five recipients were found. In several cases, children of dead recipients were handed a
13、lost letter. Deimante Zebrauskaite, head of Lithuania Post, said we felt a moral duty to do this. Zebrauskaite added, “One lady compared the experience to receiving a message from a bottle thrown into sea. People were emotional (动情的). Some people felt they saw a part of daily life of their dead pare
14、nts.”In the letter to Klonovska, sent from Koczary in Poland, a girl named Ewa complains buses no longer reach her village. Now in her 60s, Klonovska has no memory of Ewa. She probably wrote Ewa after finding her address in an advertisement for pen-pals in a newspaper. Their relationship stopped aft
15、er the letter was not delivered. “The loss was not life-changing,” said Klonovska. She then asked, “What if they delivered a lost letter from a suitor (求婚者) to his love, and their wedding never happened?”4. The word “pranking” in paragraph 2 means _.A. playing a trick onB. paying attention toC. find
16、ing fault withD. getting in touch with5. Why were some people emotional when they received the letters?A. The arrival of the lost letters had been long expected.B. They knew more about their parents through the letters.C. A postal worker hid the letters for a selfish purpose.D. Postal workers overca
17、me difficulties to find the recipients.6 What did Klonovska try to express in the last paragraph?A. All these letters were important reminders of memories.B. She didnt mind if the post office gave her the letter.C. The course of her life would never change for the lost letter.D. The lost letters cou
18、ld have caused serious consequences.CThe history of microbiology begins with a Dutch cloth maker named Antoni van Leeuwenhoek, a man of no formal scientific education. In the late 1600s, Lecuwenhoek, inspired by the magnifying lenses he used to examine cloth, built some of the first microscopes. He
19、developed a technique to improve the quality of tiny, rounded lenses, some of which could magnify an object up to 270 times. After removing some plaque from between his teeth and examining it under a lens, Lecuwenhoek found tiny twisting creatures, which he called “animalcules”. His observations, wh
20、ich he reported to the Royal Society of London, are among the first descriptions of microbes, Leeuwenhoek discovered an entire universe invisible to the human eye. He found different microbes in samples of pond water, rain water, and human blood. He gave the first description of red blood cells, obs
21、erved plant tissue, examined muscle, and investigated the life cycle of insects. Nearly two hundred years later, Leeuwenhoeks discovery of microbes helped French chemist and biologist Louis Pasteur to develop his “theory of disease”. This concept suggested that disease originates from tiny organisms
22、 attacking and weakening the body. Pasteurs theory later helped doctors to fight infectious diseases including anthrax, diphtheria, polio, smallpox, tetanus, and typhoid. All these breakthroughs were the result of Leeuwenhoeks original work. Leeuwenhoek did not foresee this legacy. In a 1716 letter,
23、 he described his contribution to science this way:“My work, which Ive done for a long time, was not pursued in order to gain the praise I now enjoy, but chiefly from a strong desire for knowledge, which I notice resides in me more than in most other men. And therefore, whenever I found out anything
24、 remarkable, I have thought it my duty to put down my discovery on paper, so that the scientific community might be informed thereof. ”7. Which of the following best describes Leeuwenhoek?A. A trained researcher with an interest in microbiology.B. A curious amateur who made pioneer studies of microb
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