广东省汕头市澄海中学2020-2021学年高一英语上学期第二次阶段考试试题.doc
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1、广东省汕头市澄海中学2020-2021学年高一英语上学期第二次阶段考试试题(满分130分,考试时间120分钟)第I卷第一部分 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,从每题所给的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。AEverybody hates rats. But in the earthquake capitals of the world-Japan, Los Angeles, Turkey-rats will soon be mans new best friends.What happens a
2、fter an earthquake? We send in rescue dogs. Why? Because they can smell people. Dogs save lives. They help rescuers to find living people. But dogs are big and they cant get into small spaces. So now a new research project is using a smaller animal to save lives: the rat.How does it work? First, the
3、 rat is trained to smell people. When this happens, the rats brain gives a signal(信号). This is sent to a small radio on its back, and then the rescuers follow the radio signals. When the rats brain activity jumps, the rescuers know that someone is alive. The rat has smelled that person.Although ther
4、e are already robots which can do this job, rats are better. Christian Linster at Cornell University-New York says, “Robots noses dont work well when there are other smells around. Rats are good at that. “Rats can also see in the dark. They are cheaper and quicker to train than dogs, and unlike robo
5、ts, they dont need electricity!The “rat project” is not finished, but Julie Ryan of International Rescue Corps in Scotland says, “It would be fantastic. A rat could get into spaces we couldnt get to and a rat would get out if it wasnt safe.” Perhaps for the first time in history, people will be happ
6、y to see a rat in a building (but only after an earthquake, of course).1. In the world earthquake capitals, rats will become mans best friends because they can _.A. take the place of mans rescue jobsB. find the position of people alive who are trapped in buildingsC. serve as food for people alive wh
7、o are trapped in buildingsD. get into small spaces2. From the third paragraph we know the rescuers can recognise a person who is alive by_.A. the noise made by the rat B. the rats unusual behaviorC. the signal sent by the radio on the rats back D. the smell given off by the person3. Rats have all th
8、e following advantages except that_.A. they are more fantastic than other animalsB. they are less expensive to train than dogsC. they dont need electricity D. they are small and can get into small placesBForeign visitors to the UK might be disappointed when they learn that not everyone there speaks
9、like Harry Potter and his friends. Usually, theres an assumption by many non-Brits that everyone in Britain speaks with whats known as a Received Pronunciation (RP,标准发音) accent, also called “the Queens English”. However, while many people do talk this way, most Britons speak in their own regional ac
10、cents.Scouse, Glaswegian and the Black Country-from Liverpool, Glasgow and the West Midlands-are just three of the countless non-RP accents that British people speak with. There are even differences in accents between towns or cities just 30 kilometers apart. What is even more disappointing is that
11、not speaking in a RP accent may mean a British person is judged and even treated differently in their everyday life.In a 2015 study by the University of New South Wales, videos of people reading a passage in three different UK accents were shown to a second group of people. The group then rated how
12、intelligent they thought the readers sounded. The lowest rated accent was the Brummie accent, native to people from Birmingham, a city whose accent is considered the working class.However, there is no need to be disappointed though you are not speaking in a RP accent. In fact, doing the opposite may
13、 even give you advantages.Kong Seong-jae, 25, is an Internet celebrity from Seoul.After studying in the UK, he picked up several regional accents. Hes now famous for his online videos, where he shows off the various accents hes learned. “British people usually get really excited when I use some of t
14、heir local dialect words, and they become much friendlier. I think it makes a bit of bond between local people and foreigners to speak in their local accent,” he said.So if youre working on perfecting your British accent, try to speak like someone from Liverpool, Glasgow or Birmingham. You may not s
15、ound like Harry Potter, but you are likely to make more friends.4.What can we infer from Paragraph 1?A. Non-Brits usually hold that all Britons speak in a RP accent.B. Only “the Queens English” is accepted in the UK .C. Foreign visitors are disappointed at their own spoken English.D. Any Received Pr
16、onunciation around the world is also called “the Queens English”.5.What do people think of the Brummie accent?A. It is favored by foreign visitors to the UK.B. It is closest to the RP accent.C. It is smart and easy to understand.D. It is spoken by people of the working class.6. What does the underli
17、ned phrase “doing the opposite” in Paragraph 4 refer to?A. Speaking in a RP accent. B. Speaking in regional accents.C. Speaking the Brummie accent. D. Speaking like Harry Potter.7. What is the passage mainly about?A. A study about the most intelligent accent in Britain.B. A comparison between differ
18、ent British accents.C. How much British people value the RP accent.D. The impact of regional accents on peoples lives.CParts of Africa are covered by a dark cloud. But this is no rain cloud. It is a living cloud made of billions of locusts (蝗虫) that are traveling across the continent eating everythi
19、ng in their path. And now in the battle to stop this disaster, a radio station in Senegal, West Africa, is offering listeners 50 kilograms of rice if they can catch and kill 50 kilograms of locusts. “We think this idea will get more people to take part in the war on the locusts,” said Abdoulaye Ba,
20、from Sud-Fm, a radio station in one of Senegals worst affected area. This is West Africas biggest locust disaster in 15 years, and it is moving east, causing huge damage to crops. As they move they produce young and increase their number and will soon threaten (威胁) Sudan in the northeast of Africa.
21、Some say it could reach Asia. Experts say the harmful effect on crops in areas already suffering from food shortage and war could cause many people to go hungry. Governments in the areas are not well equipped to fight the pest. Although leaders of 12 countries have agreed on a plan, it is not expect
22、ed to be enough. “We are now treating 6,000 hectares (公顷) per day with pesticide (杀虫剂), but we need to treat 20,000 hectares per day in order to have any hope of controlling this disaster,” said Mohamed Abdallahi Ould Babah, director of locust control in Mauritania. Requests are being made for inter
23、national aid, which is the only way to limit the disaster, the UNs Food and Agriculture Organization warned.8. By using “dark cloud” to describe locusts in the first para-graph, the author of the article _.A. showed the size and speed of the mass of locusts B. suggested the great damage that locusts
24、 can causeC. warned that locusts would sweep the continent like rain clouds D. both A and B9. The story is mainly about _.A. West Africas united effort in fighting a disaster B. the difficulty in controlling locusts C. how locusts caused great damage to West AfricaD. a struggle to fight against a di
25、saster brought by locusts in West Africa10. What can be inferred about the locust disaster from this passage?A. It would be even more serious in Asia B. It is out of controlC. It affected only the warning areas D. It cant be stopped unless twice as much pesticide is provided for the affected areas11
26、. Which of the following is WRONG ?A. Senegal is to the southwest of Sudan. B. Twelve countries affected by locusts have united but still lack pesticide.C. The locusts can cause such damage mainly because it has no natural enemy in West Africa. D. Sud-Fm offered a reward for fighting locusts so that
27、 more people would join in the effort.DLanguages have been coming and going for thousands of years, but in recent times there has been less coming and a lot more going. When the world was still populated by hunter-gatherers, small, tightly knit (联系) groups developed their own patterns of speech inde
28、pendent of each other. Some language experts believe that 10,000 years ago, when the world had just five to ten million people, they spoke perhaps 12,000 languages between them.Soon afterwards, many of those people started settling down to become farmers, and their languages too became more settled
29、and fewer in number. In recent centuries, trade, industrialization, the development of the nation-state and the spread of universal compulsory education, especially globalisation and better communications in the past few decades, all have caused many languages to disappear, and dominant languages su
30、ch as English, Spanish and Chinese are increasingly taking over.At present, the world has about 6,800 languages. The distribution of these languages is hugely uneven. The general rule is that mild zones have relatively few languages, often spoken by many people, while hot, wet zones have lots, often
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