河南省商丘市第一高级中学2019-2020学年高一英语下学期期末考试试题.doc
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1、河南省商丘市第一高级中学2019-2020学年高一英语下学期期末考试试题第二部分 阅读理解(共两节,满分40分)第一节(共15小题:每小题2分,满分30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。ATeen Climbing Camp This 5-day climbing camp is suitable for teenagers between the ages of 13 and 18 who have an interest in rock climbing. The climbing days are designed for b
2、eginners and those who have some basic experience in a gym or outdoors. Participants will find themselves challenged physically and mentally. Rock Dimensions camps are designed to be a positive and memorable experience by providing healthy communication between participants, individual goal setting,
3、 and challenges that lead to personal growth. Dates Monday, June 29-Friday, July 3 Monday, July 27-Friday, July 31LocationsClimbing Tower at Footsloggers Linville Gorge and Table Rock area Local climbing areas near Boone ResponsibilitiesParticipants will meet Rock Dimensions guides at our location e
4、ach morning and at the end of each day. Rock Dimensions will provide all climbing items, including a safety rope, a helmet and climbing shoes for each participant. Participants are responsible for bringing their own lunch, water, small backpack, appropriate clothing, and personal items like sun crea
5、m, etc.Pre-camp planning Participants will receive the following information in their registration(注册) packet Medical Form, Responsibility Agreement, Clothing/Equipment List, and Directions. Cost$575/person for the 5-day camp$325/person for the first 3 daysAnyone interested in participating in just
6、the last two days of the camp should call to discuss pricing and necessary skills/experience.21. What of the following do participants need to bring with them? A. A safety rope. B. A helmet.C. Climbing shoes.D. Appropriate clothing. 22. If Paul wants to participate in the climbing camp from July 27
7、to July 29 and his elder brother from July 27 to July 31, it will cost them _. A. 575 dollars B. 900 dollarsC.650 dollarsD. 1,150 dollars23. What can we infer from the text? A. Guides will talk about the prices with parents. B. Parents are required to stay with their children. C. Itll be hard for te
8、ens to experience the climbing. D. The climbing is physically and mentally beneficial to teens.BWhen Noah Ready-Campbell was a young adult, he worked for his fathers construction company. Back then, he dreamed of a day when robots might take over the dirty, repetitive(重复的)parts of his job, such as e
9、arth moving. Years later, Ready-Campbell left his job as an engineer with Google to make that dream come true.Ready-Campbell formed a company called Built Robotics, which develops technology to produce self-driving heavy equipment. Ready-Campbell says the companys goal is to make construction safer,
10、 faster and less costly. The construction industry struggles to find skilled workers and faces a growing number of unfinished projects. But self-operating machines are changing the nature of building.Workers at Berich Masonry in Englewood, Colorado, recently spent several weeks learning how to opera
11、te a robot called SAM, or the Semi-Automated Mason. SAM is a $400,000 machine from the company Construction Robotics. It can lay 3,000 bricks in eight hours. Thats several times more than a human bricklayer can do in the same period. But humans are still needed to load bricks into the SAM and make s
12、ure it works right. Bricklayer Michael Walsh says the SAM lessens the load on his body. But he doesnt think it will take his job.Brian Kennedy agrees, too. His organization supports the rights of construction workers in the United States and Canada. Kennedy says the union is not worried that machine
13、s will replace human workers any time soon.The rise of construction robots comes as the building industry faces a severe decrease in labor supply. One recent study showed that 70 percent of construction businesses have a difficult time finding skilled workers. Mike Moy heads a mining operation for t
14、he building materials supplier Lehigh Hanson. He says its difficult to find people who even know how to operate some of the necessary equipment. “Nobody wants to get their hands dirty any more. They want a nice, clean job in an office,” he noted.24. What does the first paragraph say about Noah Ready
15、-Campbell?A. He enjoys doing repetitive work. B. He is now an employee of Google.C. He joined Google to realize that dream.D. He used to work in construction field.25. One of the aims of Built Robotics is to _A. enlarge construction quantity. B. increase construction speed.C. improve construction de
16、signs. D. change construction steps.26. What can be inferred about SAM from the text?A. It can totally replace human bricklayers.B. It is complexly built but easy to operate.C. It is unable to work completely automatically. D. It is cheap but works much faster than humans.27. In Mike Moys opinion, w
17、hat prevents many construction businesses from finding skilled workers?A. Their poor working conditions. B. Their potential risks.C. Their heavy work loads. D. Their low pay. CTom Costello was once afraid of homeless Americans. “I was so afraid that if I saw a homeless person walking down the street
18、, Id cross the street,” he said.That changed seven years ago after his wife, Nancy, a volunteer at a homeless shelter, persuaded him to help with a holiday dinner for shelter residents. Tom remembered going to a store and buying socks for the residents. He knew many of them were in need of clothing.
19、At the shelter, Tom said, he dropped a pair of socks into a bag for a woman. She asked him if she could have socks for a friend who wasnt with her that day. He gave her another pair. “She started to cry and told me that nobody had ever given her socks before,” Tom said, “Then she reached out and gav
20、e me a hug.” That experience at the shelter helped Tom end his fear of the homeless.It also led him to set up a group called “The Joy of Sox”, which borrows from a name of a popular book. The group collects socks from donors and gives them mostly to shelters in the area where Tom and Nancy live. It
21、has been expanding its reach and provides socks to homeless shelters in 21 states and other three countries now.Why socks? Tom explains that some Americans give food, coats and other clothing to shelters. But donating socks is not something most people think about. And, he said, socks are very helpf
22、ul at keeping people warm, especially in cold weather. A man named Kiwi, who has lived in homeless shelters, said most of the time he could find enough food through shelters and soup kitchens. But socks were much more difficult to get, he noted.28. Which one of the following removed Tom s fright of
23、the homeless?A. A womans need for socks. B. The encouragement from Nancy.C. The hug from a homeless person. D. The first experience of helping the homeless.29. What did Tom do when the woman asked for another pair of socks?A. He felt afraid. B. He walked away.C. He satisfied her demand. D. He gave h
24、er a hug.30. What can we know about “The Joy of Sox”?A. It got the name from a book. B. It was founded by Tom and Nancy.C. It helps the homeless of three countries. D. It buys different socks for the homeless.31. Why does Tom provide socks for the homeless?A. The homeless are lack of socks. B. Tom s
25、 wife persuaded him to do so.C. Socks are popular among the donators. D. The homeless cant buy socks in shelters.DCalorie(卡路里)counts are everywhere. They appear on restaurant menus, milk boxes and bags of baby carrots. Grocery stores display lots of foods packaged with bright and colorful “low-calor
26、ie” claims.A calorie is the measure of stored energy in something-energy that can be released as heat when burned. The term calorie on food labels is short for kilocalorie. A kilocalorie is the amount of energy it takes to raise the temperature of one kilogram of water by 1 degree Celsius. But what
27、does boiling water have to do with your bodys release of energy from food? After all, your body doesnt start boiling after eating. It does, however, chemically break down food into sugars. The body then releases the energy to fuel processes and activities throughout each hour of the day.Food contain
28、s three main types of nutrients that deliver energy: fats, proteins and carbs(碳水化合物). A process called metabolism(新陈代谢) first cuts these into small pieces. Proteins break down into amino acids(氨基酸), fats into fatty acids and carbs into simple sugars. Then, the body uses oxygen to break down these ma
29、terials to release heat.Most of this energy goes toward powering the heart, lungs, brain and other vital processes. Exercise and other activities also use energy. If energy-rich nutrients arent used right away, your body will hoard them-first in the liver(肝脏), and then later as body fat.In general,
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