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题型:完形填空 题类:模拟题 难易度:困难

江苏省苏州市2020届高三英语6月八校联考试卷

请阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。

    My cousin is nine years old, a little bit fat and doesn't do really well at school. She is heavily  1, and thus has developed some resistance and 2 towards adults, who usually don't put high hopes in her.

    Yesterday we went to an art 3together. There were paintings from kids with disabilities. My 1ittle girl has a(n)4eye, for the paintings she liked most were also the best of the show. She voluntarily helped to5the chairs and table for a sharing session, painted by herself alongside new fiends and also6helped me to get my bag from another room, something that doesn't happen often at 7as she's usually8to her iPad.

    In the afternoon, we went to buy books together. I bought a book written by a mom 9her journey with her autistic(自闭的)son. On the bus back home, I 10introduced the book to my cousin, and to my 11she was truly interested. She kept asking me to tell more stories about the boy who12with small things in life. Even when the subject wandered elsewhere, she 13hearing more about this boy. I have never seen her so interested in a 14. Usually when she talks to me she describes events without a 15focus. I'm 16that the life of a 17 has found its way into this little girl's heart.

    I'm very thankful for the18of books, for the beauty that my cousin revealed to me, and for the time we had together. I 19that I can keep seeing clearly the wonderful things in her, so that whenever unkindness20, I can remind her how truly wonderful she has always been.

(1)
A、abused B、envied C、teased D、amused
(2)
A、curiosity B、dependence C、confusion D、distrust
(3)
A、exhibition B、performance C、competition D、lesson
(4)
A、innocent B、sharp C、doubtful D、critical
(5)
A、remove B、prepare C、distribute D、arrange
(6)
A、regularly B、reluctantly C、cheerfully D、cautiously
(7)
A、home B、school C、work D、night
(8)
A、introduced B、attached C、committed D、related
(9)
A、tailoring B、recording C、promoting D、making
(10)
A、proudly B、secretly C、concretely D、briefly
(11)
A、surprise B、admiration C、relief D、worry
(12)
A、interferes B、lives C、struggles D、meets
(13)
A、got over B、insisted on C、set about D、picked up
(14)
A、book B、journey C、boy D、topic
(15)
A、clear B、simple C、familiar D、fresh
(16)
A、touched B、satisfied C、hopeful D、successful
(17)
A、reader B、parent C、traveler D、stranger
(18)
A、sales B、content C、power D、characters
(19)
A、assume B、deduce C、pray D、conclude
(20)
A、continues B、arises C、spreads D、works
举一反三
阅读理解

Adults check their phones, on average,360 times a day, and spend almost three hours a day on their devices in total. The problem for many of us is that one quick phone-related task leads to a quick check of our emails or social media feeds, and suddenly we've been sucked into endless scrolling.

It's an awful circle. The more useful our phones become, the more we use them. The more we use them, the more we lay neural(神经的) pathways in our brains that lead to pick up our phones for whatever task is at hand-and the more we feel an urge to check our phones even when we don't have to.

What we do know is that the simple distraction of checking a phone or seeing a notification(通知)can have negative consequences. This isn't very surprising; we know that, in general, multitasking does harm to memory and performance. One of the most dangerous examples is phone use while driving. One study found that merely speaking on the phone, not texting, was enough to make drivers slower to react on the road. It's true for everyday tasks that are less high-risk, too. Simply hearing a notification "ding" made participants of another study perform far worse on a task-almost as badly as participants who were speaking or texting on the phone during the task.

It isn't just the use of a phone that has consequences-its me re presence can affect the way we think.

In one recent study, for example, researchers asked participants to either put their phones next to them so they were visible(like on a desk), nearby and out of sight(like in a bag or pocket), or in another room. They were found to perform far better when their phones were in another room instead of nearby-whether visible, powered on or not.

阅读下面短文,从每题所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项。

Rebecka Peterson, a high school math teacher, is the nation's 2023 Teacher of the Year. Her first year of teaching wasn't without its 1 ,but she remembered why she was there and wanted to bear those2 thoughts in mind. So she 3 the One Good Thing blog.

It was 4 and fun, really. Every evening, she would write on her blog, 5 "one good thing she experienced that day. She gave her blog the tagline; "Every day may not be good, but there is on good thing in every day."

She encouraged her 6 to do the same in their handwritten journals. Just a few minutes a day to7 something good that happened—that would be enough, she 8 . She believes that it will make them happier and more 9 to learn.

During her eleven years in teaching, Peterson has10 that some students find math difficult. But her efforts to make it 11 made her the 2023 Oklahoma Teacher of the Year. From there, she made the 12 to win the nation's 2023 Teacher of the Year.

Peterson has travelled around the country, talking to teaches about binging 13 back to Classrooms. Her goals include emphasizing the positive experiences students have not only with math but with learning 14 . She hopes her stories will attract new teachers to the profession and give 15 to current ones.

 阅读理解

Grief ran through the first decade of my career. I photographed stories about terrible topics: immigration, conflict, war. On the cover of my notebook in 2019, I wrote, "Discover the joy again." It was intended to remind me to play more.

Sometimes I'd get a rare assignment where I could breathe — for example, photographing an article on tea for an airline magazine. I took the job hoping to make interesting, almost movie images, but at the end of the day, I found I'd made nothing of the sort. Packing up my camera, I felt like a failure.

On the drive back to the hotel, I noticed heavy steam rising from a building up ahead. Arriving at the scene, I opened the car door — and realized it was a tourist attraction traditionally pulled by a steam engine. Then, out of nowhere, a figure ran toward me. I picked up my camera and quickly made three pictures. One was out of focus. One was poorly composed. But one worked.

When I submitted my pictures to the editor for the tea article, this one wasn't chosen to be published, but I knew it meant something to me. I had been looking for good luck in my own life. This photograph symbolized exactly that.

I was 27 when I first traveled to India after the sudden passing of my father. Over many months, with my best friend, I traversed India with no phone, with limited Internet, and with healing as my compass. I climbed mountains, swam in the sea, and lived in relief entirely.

As I learned to travel to some of the world's cities with the largest population, I began to see life with more color and magic. I permitted myself to walk aimlessly, with no goal but to observe, and each moment became a dance. If this journey taught me anything, it's that what comes next will bring its own magic.

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