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题型:完形填空 题类:模拟题 难易度:困难

江苏省2020年高考英语全真模拟试卷三

请认真阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的A、B、C、D 四个选项中,选出最佳选项。

    Recently, David Deutchman, an 82-year-old man, was nicknamed "the ICU Grandpa" at Children's Healthcare of Atlanta Hospital. For 12 years or so, he has been 1 babies, children there.

    Deutchman said he was coming to the 2 for a recovery after a running injury 12 years ago when he first 3 some of the patients' mothers. From conversations with them, he 4 that he wanted to make more connection with parents and children being5 at the hospital. Therefore, he started 6 at Children's Healthcare of Atlanta Hospital after he retired from a job in international business marketing.

    He 7 babies and sometimes he even gets peed(小便)on, but he is 8 to carry on. "It's been wonderful because it gives me something to do that has 9 to it. Every day I drive in here, I don't know which kids and parents I'll 10 and what the issues will be and how I can help, but I 11 it. You just can't imagine the kind of 12 that I can get from holding a baby and talking with parents", he said.

    In the ICU, there are only two to three new admits every night so the first thing he will do is to 13 the parents who have been admitted the previous night. "Usually they needed a 14 after a whole night. And I make sure they can go down for breakfast and I'll stay with the 15 until they get back," he said.

    MaryBeth Brulette, the mother of baby Logan, has been at the hospital for six weeks. On a recent morning, she returned to the hospital to find Logan in Deutchman's 16. Seeing this, she said, "All my 17 was gone."

    Elizabeth Mittiga, an ICU nurse at the hospital, said that the staff 18 Deutchman's calming presence and appreciated Mr. Deutchman's 19 to his cause. He's a great help to babies in the ICU care. He's just a really special person to us, as nurses, and the babies just adore him.

    "Right now, I'm still going strong and enjoying it an awful lot," he said. "So as long as they'll have me, I'll be there." What an outstanding human being! Truly, Mr. Deutchman is the typical example of a 20 man with a sincere desire to make his life worthwhile by helping others.

(1)
A、tending B、educating C、examining D、curing
(2)
A、house B、hospital C、apartment D、center
(3)
A、disturbed B、persuaded C、accepted D、noticed
(4)
A、imagined B、remembered C、realized D、studied
(5)
A、treated B、injured C、interviewed D、ignored
(6)
A、teaching B、instructing C、volunteering D、exhibiting
(7)
A、holds B、praises C、seeks D、raises
(8)
A、concerned B、annoyed C、confused D、determined
(9)
A、training B、meaning C、thinking D、ending
(10)
A、protect B、greet C、meet D、call
(11)
A、miss B、fear C、control D、enjoy
(12)
A、trouble B、reward C、effort D、change
(13)
A、rescue B、visit C、inform D、count
(14)
A、break B、message C、lesson D、drive
(15)
A、doctors B、cleaners C、children D、partners
(16)
A、arms B、bed C、hands D、room
(17)
A、relief B、sorrow C、anxiety D、curiosity
(18)
A、shared B、regretted C、complained D、treasured
(19)
A、evaluation B、devotion C、application D、explanation
(20)
A、brave B、creative C、careless D、selfless
举一反三
 阅读理解

Day Camp

Our Day Camp is more than a place where children simply play. We are a group of devoted educators who long to make a meaningful difference in the lives of children. 

Sailfish

Entering 3rd & 4th Grades

Sailfish groups are separated by gender(性别) and enjoy intramural(校内的) sports with a greater emphasis placed on teamwork and sportsmanship. Sailfish group also enjoy all of the aquatic(水生的) activities our waterfront campus has to offer, along with a daily schedule of activities that enrich the mind and body. 

Tadpoles

Entering Kindergarten

This group of campers have their own learning facility(设施) and take part in age-appropriate specials throughout the day. The Tadpoles swim twice daily in our in-ground swimming pool. A certified teacher and counselorsc指导老师) arganize and monitor the day's activities, helping the Tadpoles to prepare for the fun of the upcoming school year. 

Minnows

Entering lst & 2nd Grades

These campers are grouped by gender and have the chance to play sports-centered games, explore art and saence and become acquainted with the excitement of sailing on Stony Brook Harbor. Daily swimming lessons are also included, and trips to the beach are a favorite of the Minnows. Both certified teachers and senior counselors work with these campers to provide a safe and enriching experience. 

Dolphins

Entering 5th & 6th Grades

These campers participate in a wide variety of sports and activities. Same-gendered grouping allows flexibility for the groups to choose their favorite games during meeting times. Dolphins also spend time sailing on the Harbor, swimming in our in-ground swimming pool and participating in adventurous activities. 

 阅读理解

D

With the completion of the Human Genome(基因组)Project more than 20 years ago, and the discovery of the double helix structure of DNA enjoying its 70th birthday last year, you might assume that we know how life works. Think again!

Evolution has a 4bn-year head start on us. However, several aspects of the standard picture of how life works-the idea of the genome as a blueprint, of genes as instructions for building an organism, of proteins as precisely tailored molecular(分子)machines and more-have wildly reduced the complexity of life. 

In the excellent book How Life Works, Philip Ball explorers the new biology, revealing life to be a far richer, more delicate affair than we have understood. Ball explains that life is a system of many levels-genes, proteins, cells, tissues, and body modules-each with its own rules and principles, so there is no unique place to look for an answer to it. 

Also, How Life Works is a much more appealing title than the overused question of "What is life?". We should be less concerned with what a thing is, and rather more focused on what a thing does. Defining a living thing implies an unchangeable ideal type, but this will run counter to the Darwinian principle that living things are four-dimensional, ever changing in time as well as space.

But it's an idea that is deeply rooted within our culture. Ball points out that we rely on metaphors(比喻)to explain and explore the complexities of life, but none suffice. We are taught that cells are machines, though no machine we have invented behaves like the simplest cell; that DNA is a code or a blueprint, though it is neither; that the brain is a computer, though no computer behaves like a brain at all.

Ball is a terrific writer, pumping out books on incredibly diverse subjects. There's a wealth of well-researched information in here, and some details that are a bit chewy for the lay reader. But the book serves as an essential introduction on our never-ending quest to understand life.

阅读下面短文,在空白处填入1个适当的单词或括号内单词的正确形式。

The popularity of ancient towns in the south of the Yangtze River, such as Zhouzhuang and Wuzhen, has aroused a nationwide trend in the construction of ancient towns. Lin Peng, the director of China's Institute of Ancient Cities and Cultural Studies, pointed {#blank#}1{#/blank#} that there are more than 2,800 developed or developing ancient towns in our country, {#blank#}2{#/blank#} is definitely the highest number globally.

In ancient towns, {#blank#}3{#/blank#} immersive(沉浸式) experience being mentioned here is historical and cultural characteristics—the "ancient" of ancient towns. Apart from visible "special buildings", characteristics also include invisible "culture". Tourists in ancient towns want to see the living {#blank#}4{#/blank#} (condition) of local people, feel the vitality of town life, try characteristic local snacks {#blank#}5{#/blank#} (influence) by geography and folk customs, and understand how long history {#blank#}6{#/blank#} (shape) local culture. Out of modern fast-paced work and life, tourists want to awaken their inner softness with a slow-moving ancient town.

Touring ancient towns is for recreation, relaxation, and pleasure, {#blank#}7{#/blank#} if all the ancient towns in different places are the same and cannot find their own {#blank#}8{#/blank#} (unique), then ancient town tourism will {#blank#}9{#/blank#} (eventual) decline. Let every ancient town become a unique historical imprint(印记), so that tourists can find their "poetry and distance" while {#blank#}10{#/blank#} (wander) through the ancient towns. This is the soul that ancient towns need to regain.

 阅读下列短文,从每题所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中选出最佳选项。

It was a typical weekend for Mitch White and his friends. They were out celebrating a bachelor party, sailing the peaceful waters of the Minnesota River. They never expected that this single party would transform from a relaxed canoe trip into a painful rescue mission. With the sun setting, an unexpected bark changed everything.

Led by Mitch White, the soon-to-be-married man, they searched for the source of the sound along the banks of the river. Suddenly, a weak cry for help came from the mud. They were surprised to find that the head of a 13-year-old St. Bernard named Ed was barely visible in the thick mud. Mitch said, "The dog wasn't moving on its own, so we should feed it and give it water. " The dog looked like i had used all its strength.

The men took up their oars(桨) and began digging, their festive mood giving way to a focused rescue mission. It took them more than half an hour to free the trapped dog as it was already breathing very feebly after possibly being trapped for 24 hours. When they got the poor fellow out of the mud, he couldn't walk, so they carried him back to the house. Back home with his owner, George Niskanen, Ed began his slow restoration-a happy ending to a dangerous adventure. George was thankful to the bachelor party heroes.

Now, the people of Carver, Minnesota, have new heroes to cheer for. Indeed, this incredible act of bravery and compassion redefined the meaning of a bachelor party. It became a heroic tale of humanity, friendship, and the instinct(本能)to do what's right.

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