湖南凤凰县2017高考英语一轮阅读理解专练试卷(10份)
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湖南凤凰县2017高考英语一轮阅读理解专练(10份打包)及答案
湖南凤凰县2017高考英语一轮阅读理解专练及参考答案.doc
湖南凤凰县2017高考英语一轮阅读理解专练(一)及答案.doc
湖南凤凰县2017高考英语一轮阅读理解专练及答案.doc
湖南凤凰县2017高考英语阅读理解暑假编练(二)及答案.doc
湖南凤凰县2017高考英语阅读理解暑假编练(三)及答案.doc
湖南凤凰县2017高考英语阅读理解暑假编练(五)及答案.doc
湖南凤凰县2017高考英语阅读理解暑假编练(一)及答案.doc
湖南凤凰县2017高考英语阅读理解暑假编练及参考答案.doc
湖南凤凰县2017高考英语阅读理解暑假编练及答案.doc
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湖南凤凰县2017高考英语一轮阅读理解专练(一)及答案
【2016高考英语阅读理解训练】阅读下面短文,选择最佳答案。
If you are a college student, probably you are greatly stressed when the final exams are coming. University students are good at coming up with ways to cope with the stress of college life. But some students at a college in Canada have started a new trend that is family-friendly, opening a puppy room for students during finals week (December 4-6)
The National Post reports that for three days during finals weedents at Dalousie University can spend some time with lovely dogs, which is being brought in by Therapeutic Paws of Canada. “It is something that people need right now because students are superstressed,” Michael Kean, an environmental science student who first proposed the idea, told me the Post.
After the student union first advertised the event on its Face book page, the news of the Puppy Room spread quickly across social networking sites. “Our expectations are pretty high right now,” Gavin Jardine, vice president of student life at Dalhousie told the Post. “We had 1800 shares, thousands of ‘likes’. It attracted a lot of attention on Twitter as well. It spread as quickly as a virus.”
Don LeBlance of Therapeutc Paws of Canada said all the dogs attending the event come from loving homes and enjoy the company of people. A number of different breeds will be on hand to interact with students who sign up to visit the Puppy Room. And buzz from the Dalhousie Puppy Room has spread so quickly that LeBlance says a half dozen universities have already called about staging similar events for their students.
So, is there any actual evidence to support using guest dogs to reduce the stress of busy college students? “If you do any research at all about the benefits of using pets, you will find out quite quickly that it lowers blood pressure,” LeBlanc said. “It certainly made a huge difference in my life when I got a dog.”
1 What is Michael Kean’s attitude toward the puppy room?
A. He thinks it is bad for dogs. B. He doesn’t think it is relaxing.
C. He thinks it is a waste of time. D. He thinks it works for college students.
2 Paragraph 3 shows the idea of the puppy room was___________.
A. surprising B. harmful C. well received D. inspiring
3 We know from Paragraph 4 that some universities want to ____________.
A. find out if their students are also stressed
B. follow the example of the college in Canada
C. find out why dogs are loved by college students
D. introduce some dogs from the college in Canada
4 What’s the main idea of the passage?
A. Puppies have become very popular with college students.
B. College students have more ways of relaxing than before.
C. A college is offering more ways of entertainment for students.
D. A college is offering a puppy room for stressed college students.
参考答案1—4 DCBD
阅读理解-------C
Many of us mistakenly believe that it's wrong to think we have any good qualities. We may spend a lot of time blaming ourselves for our negative qualities, thinking that self critici湖南凤凰县2017高考英语一轮阅读理解专练及参考答案
【2016高考英语阅读理解训练】阅读下面短文,选择最佳答案。
Teenagers who spend hours in front of the television may have a poorer diet as young adults.
A study,which included nearly 1,400 high school students,found those who watched TV for five hours or more per day had less healthy diets than peers(同龄人)five years later. Why does this happen? Should the parents take any measures?
On the one hand,people who spend a lot of time in front of the TV, especially teenagers,may snack more,and that may affect their long-term diet quality.
On the other hand,TV ads for fast food,sweets and snacks tempt teenagers to eat more of those foods. And TV time might also replace exercise time for some kids.
Lead researcher Dr. Daheia J. Barr-Anderson,of the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis,told Reuters Health a clear correlation between TV time during high school and diet quality in young adulthood. While the heaviest TV viewers were eating the most junk food , those who'd watched less than two hours per day had the highest intake(吸收)of fruits,vegetables, whole grains and high-calcium food. In her opinion,parents should limit and monitor TV viewing.
As far as I am concerned,children should watch no more than two hours of television per day. And parents should set a good example by eating right,being physically active and curbing their own TV time.
1. What's the best title for this passage?
A. People should keep away from TV to keep healthy.
B. Teenagers' TV time may affect their diets later.
C. Why do teenagers like TV"
D. Parents' own habits may affect children later.
2. According to the passage,heavy TV viewers tend to_.
A. eat more fruits B. eat less junk food
C. take in fewer vegetables D. take in high-calcium food
3. What suggestion does the author give the parents?
A. They must watch TV with their children.
B. They should forbid the children to watch TV.
C. They should pay attention to nutrition in diets.
D. They can't do what they don't want their children to do.
4. The underlined word“curbing" in the last paragraph can be replaced by
A. adding B. checking C. controlling D. stopping
参考答案1--4BCDC
【2014界黑龙江省哈三中高三上第三次验收考试】B
People who averaged fewer than seven hours of sleep per night in the weeks before being exposed to the cold virus were nearly three times as likely to get sick as those who averaged eight hours or
湖南凤凰县2017高考英语一轮阅读理解专练及答案
【2016高考英语阅读理解训练】阅读下面短文,选择最佳答案。
● Health, Wellness and the Politics of Food
9:00-9:45a.m. Blue Tent
Panelists(讨论会成员): Jami Bernard, David Kamp, Marion Nestle and Peter Singer.
Hosted by Denise Gray, science writer for The New York Times.
How does what we eat not only affect our bodies, but also the world? The food and nutrition experts debate the role that the diet plays in both personal and global health, and present a look at food politics.
● Sports writing: For the Love of the Game
9:50-10:35a.m. Blue Tent
Panelists: Christine Brennan, Ira Rosen, Joe Wallace and Joe Drape.
Hosted by William C. Rhoden, sports writer for The New York Times.
Whether catching that key moment of victory or defeat, or covering breaking news, sports writers are anything but audience. Listen as some professionals discuss the special experience in reporting of sports news.
● The Art of the Review
11:15-12:00a.m. Green Tent
Panelists: John Freeman, Barry Gewen, David Orr, Celia McGee and Jennifer Schuessler.
Hosted by Sam Tanenhaus, editor for the Book Review The New York Times.
How much of an effect does the book review have on book sales? Join this group of critics as they discuss the reality of the book review and bestseller lists, and how they choose books for review.
● New York Writers, New York Stories
3:00-3:45p.m. Green Tent
Panelists: Cindy Adams, Richard Cohen, Ric Klass and Lauren Redniss.
Hosted by Clyde Haberman, columnist(专栏作家) for the City Section of The New York Times.
Join this inspiring group of New York—centric writers as they talt why New York is a gold mine of ideas for their work.
1. If you are free in the afternoon, you can attend _________.
A. The Art of the Review
B. Health, Wellness and the Politics of Food
C. New York Writers, New York Stories
D. Sports Writing: For the Love of the Game
2. Sam Tanenhaus is in charge of _________.
A. The Art of the Review
B. Health, Wellness and the Politics of Food
C. New York Writers, New York Stories
D. Sports Writing: For the Love of the Game
3. All the four activities above _________.
A. are about writing B. can be attended freely
C. will last 45 minutes each D. will attract many readers
4. We can learn from the text that _________.
A. sports writers are a type of audience
B. book reviews may affect book sales
C. Denise Grady will discuss political policy
D. The New York Times is popular
参考答案1-4CACB
阅读理解。
The television news feature about Ben Heckmann, an eighth grader from Farmington, Minn, was breathless in its praise. “At 14, he has accomplished something many adults can’t achieve,” the reporter said, “Ben is a twice-published author.” But Ben’s two “Velvet Black” books, describing a fictional rock band, were not picked from a pile of manuscripts(手稿)by an eagle eyed publisher. They were self-published, at the cost of $400 by Ben’s parents.
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