2022最新英语时事阅读题八(适用于初三和高一学生) WORD版含答案.docx
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1、2022最新英语时事阅读题八(适用于初三和高一学生)A篇AUnited Statestravel ban on foreign visitors from many countries was lifted on Monday. The actionpermittedmany international travelers to take passengerflightstoAmericafor the first time since the COVID-19 health crisis began.Travelers must show they are fullyvaccinatedbe
2、fore they can get on a plane. They are also required to show anegativeCOVID-19 test taken within 72 hours of travel. Children under 18 do not need to bevaccinated, but are required to take a COVID-19 test. Children younger than two years do not need to take a test.TheadministrationofformerPresident
3、Donald Trump first placed COVID-19-relatedrestrictionson air travelers in January 2020. These were laterextendedto 33 countries, including many in Europe. Americans have beenpermittedto travel to Europe for months. European governments had been pushing theU.S.to change itspolicies. TheU.S.had alsore
4、strictedentry through landbordersfromMexicoandCanadato only essential travel.Beginning Monday, anyone can enter if they showproofthat they have beenvaccinated. Acceptablevaccinesare thoseapprovedforemergencyuse by the World HealthOrganization(WHO). These include injections(注射) from Pfizer, Moderna,
5、Johnson & Johnson, AstraZeneca and Chinas Sinovac.Russias Sputnik V vaccine has not beenapprovedby the WHO and is not acceptable. There will beexceptionsto the vaccine requirement for people from countries where fewer than 10 percent of the population has beenvaccinated. Travelers from those nations
6、 will needs pecialpermissionfrom theU.S.government to enter. Airline companies will be responsible for enforcing(强制执行)thevaccinerequirements and could face governmentfines(罚款)if they do not follow the rules.Alice Keane told Reuters news agency she was finally getting to travel from London to Miami t
7、o see her sister. She said it was really, really exciting. I was meant to go just before COVID happened, andobviouslyits been delayed this long, so its really exciting to finally be able to go, she said.Mexicos Ciudad Juarez is just across the border from El Paso, Texas. In that city, a line of abou
8、t 20 people formed early Monday to enter theU.S., Reuters reported. Some members of the group had not seen family members on the other side since March 2020.We thought they were going to tell us again that they had decided not to open it, said Lorena Hernandez. She wasreunitedwith her grown-up daugh
9、ter in El Paso. I said, if they dont reopen, Im going to take a plane, she added.(426 words)根据文章内容,选择最佳答案:1. When did the travel ban begin? A. In 2018. B. In 2019. C. In 2020.D. 2021.2. Now you can travel to United States if_. A. you are fully vaccinated. B. you have a negative COVID-19 test. C. you
10、 are over 18. D. you have a special permission from theU.S.government3. Which statement isuntruefrom the report? A. Its the first time for US to cancel the ban. B. Americans cant travel to Europe before the cancel, either. C. Not all vaccines are acceptable for theUSgovernment. D. The ban will be no
11、 longer in force from this Monday on.4. From Shai Weiss we can learn that_. A. the ban worked well in the past. B. the crisisin Europe are tooserious forpeople to stay. C. too many people cant wait to enter theUnited States. D. the COVID-19 health crisis has killed many lives.5. What does the underl
12、ined wordexceptionmean? A. Very important people.B. People caught by the COVID-19. C. People not included in a general statement. D. People not fromAmerica.B篇Venice,Italy, is known for its beautiful buildings and waterways, orcanals. But the way that the 1,600-year-old city was built makes it especi
13、ally at risk ofdamagefrom sea-level rise. Rising sea levels are increasing the number of floods during high tides.And for many years, Venice has been slowlysinking. Climate scientists and world leaders plan to meet later this month inScotlandfor a major United Nations climate conference. They will b
14、e thinking of the future of coastal cities like Venice.Last month, the European Geo sciencesUnion releaseda new study on Venice. It found that the Italian city could see a sea-level rise of 120 centimeters by the end of the century. That is 50 percent higher than the worst-case average that U.N. sci
15、entists have predicted for worldwide rising sea levels by 2100.One of the most famous places in Venice is St. Marks Basilica. Thereligiousbuilding sits at Venices lowest area. It offers scientists a chance toobservethe effects of rising seas on the city. The square floods during an 80-centimeter ris
16、e. Water gets into the building itself at 88 centimeters.Carlo Alberto Tesser in is the buildings chief caretaker. He told The Associated Press that flooding no longer happens from time to time. He said, It is an everyday occurrence. Floods above 1.1 meters are called acquaalta,or high water.Venice
17、has experienced 163 such floods in the past 20 years. That is almost as many as the city faced during the 100 years before that.Exceptionalfloods over 140 centimeters are also increasing. That mark has been hit 25 times since Venice started keeping records in 1872. Two-thirds happened in the last 20
18、 years. One-fifth happened during adisastrousflooding period in late 2019.The Venice Water Authority built a special system of moveable underwaterbarriersto help protect the city. The system is known as MOSE. Theprojectcost nearly $7 billion. It has faced many years of cost overruns, delays and corr
19、uption and is still officially in the testing phase. Since October 2020, MOSEs barriers have been raised 20 times. The system currently protects the cities from some but not all floods.Elisabetta Spitz is one of the head officials of the project. She said the projects completion has been delayed unt
20、il 2023. She said $580 million in spending for improvements will make sure of its long-term effectiveness.Paolo Vielmo is an engineer. He notes that when MOSE was first proposed(提议), sea-levelrise wasprojectedat 22 centimeters. That is far below U.N. scientists current worst-case prediction of 80 ce
21、ntimeters. Current plans say that MOSE barriers will not raise for floods of 1.1 meters until the project receives finalapproval. That leaves St. Marks Basilica in danger.Annapaola Lavena has a business along the square in front of St. Marks. She and other business owners there increasingly see them
22、selves at the center of the climate crisis. The acquittal is getting worse, and it completely blocks business.Venice lives thanks to its artisans andtourism. If there is no moretourism, Venice dies, she said. We have a great responsibility in trying to save it, Lavena added, . but we are suffering a
23、 lot.(548 words)根据文章内容,选择最佳答案:1. Venicelives thanks to its artisans and tourism because _.A. it faces more and more high floods recently.B. it has beautiful buildings and waterways.C. it builds a special system of moveable underwater barriers.D. it is at the center of the climate crisis.2. St. Marks
24、 Basilica is paid close attention tobecause of_.A. its building B. its religious activitiesC. its location D. its shopping market.3. There are _ high-water floods each year in Venice in the 21stcentury.A. about 10 B. about 20 C. about 50 D. about 1004. What does the underlined wordExceptionalmean? A
25、. very successful B. very important C. very unusual D. unusually good5. Which statement is untrue about MOSE?A. It can stop all the current floods.B. It is raised to stop the floods when they occur.C. More and more money is spent on the project.D. It is growing higher and higher.C篇The large Itaipu d
26、am, betweenParaguayandBrazil,is facing anenergyproduction crisis because of record low river and rainfall levels. Experts say those low levels could last into 2022.The Itaipu dam supplies about 10 percent of theenergyused inBrazil and 86 percent of energy used in Paraguay. The dam has recorded its l
27、owest energy production levels since it began fulloperationin 2005.Hugo Zarate is head of operations at the Itaipu dam. He told Reuters we have available power, what we dont have is water to sustain(维持) that power for a long time. He added that the dam was meeting thedemand, but for short periods of
28、 time.Zarate estimated that energy production at Itaipu would be between 65,000 and 67,000 gigawatt hours this year. Thats about 35 percent of the maximumvalue of 2016 and 15 percent less than in 2020, he said.The low levelsaffectedboth power production and the money the countries receive for the us
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